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ivan@stellysee.de
From | ronald and karen sanchez <eldeluxe@mcn.net> |
Subject | Re: the death of the CD |
Date | Fri, 05 Sep 2003 10:53:00 -0700 |
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This all goes back to the tactile aspect of record buying...looking at the
labels and picture sleeves, digging through the bins to find something
new. This is a major part of music isn't it? I still marvel at label art
and can spot something at a glance. Kids these days don't get this unless
they have grown up with parents who have collections, and maybe drag them
to collectors shops or record fairs.
I don't even like to buy music on line unless I absolutely have to. So
much of the fun goes out of it. Downloading or getting burned copies of
cds just doesn't feel right to me.
We were talking about the downloading issue last night, and the only real
analogy I can make is shoplifting. Sorry kids...
RS
Brian Keane wrote:
> >>What singles did-- cheap, accessible ways for the purchase of instant
> >>gratification-- was they turn kids into music buyers.
>
> Definitely. It was a face to face cash transaction. Things like
> iTunes probably don't have a much better chance of capturing kids.
> Kids generally can't spend money online.
>
> Brian
-- Ronald Sanchez
Director Of A&R
Career Records
www.CareerRecords.com
The Donovan's Brain Web Site
www.Donovans-Brain.com
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