Entries tagged with ‘Music’:

This is why unlimited music fails

Monday, November 14, 2005 at or around 06:42 PM

I’m a diehard iTunes music store fan. I freely admit that I love it.

And, since I also love iTunes as a music player, and my iPod, it makes the whole “closed loop” thing work.

I don’t mind paying $9.99 for an album, when I can put it on my home computer, my work computer, my iPod, and burn a CD of the music for listening to in my car. It’s great.

However, for the past few months (based on some of the urging of previous AOL co-workers) I’ve been playing with the Yahoo! Music Engine (aptly called Y! Me). The draw is: for $7 bucks (or whatever it is) a month, I can listen to all the music I want. Any album, any time. As much as I want.

Now, there’s some limitations here…

  • The Y! Me? Player is absolutely atrocious. The UI for this thing is simply awful. I find myself cursing at it fairly often.
  • The Y! Me? Player also takes up a tremendous amount of system resources (~80mb of memory). 80mb just for a music player?! Jesus, that’s just bloat.
  • You can’t burn any of the music you download. If you want to burn something, you have to pay for it again, and the pricing varies. Nothing like the iTunes $.99 a song model. Which ultimately means no music in my car.
  • Following along with that, all of the music is unplayable on both my powerbook and my iPod. And after dropping $300 on my iPod, I’m not about to go and buy another (sub-par) WMA music player.
  • And finally, the obvious problem, the minute you stop paying the monthly fee, all of the music expires. It’s done. You got nothing.

But you know what? Even with all these things against it, I still managed to fight my way through the UI, and generally “deal” with it… Simply because having unlimited music was just such a hoot. Almost anything I could think of at my fingers. Unlimited listening. It was powerful. Awesome, even. Think of a band, and go download hours of music from them.

That is, until today.

 Emiliana Torrini’s Fisherman’s Woman

One of the albums I had been enjoying was Emiliana Torrini’s Fisherman’s Woman. This was one of the first albums I downloaded when trying out the service (I believe I heard about her on NPR or something). Now, at some point, this album would no longer play. I, at first chalked it up to a bug in the Y! Me? Player, and kept meaning to look into it. Click to play, and nothing, it would just zip right by.

So today, I decided to delete those tracks, and re-add them, only to find, much to my delight, that album is no longer available for download. Oh, it’s listed there, and I can purchase it, but I can’t listen to it, however would I like to listen to a 30 second clip?

Naturally, this led me to finding at least 6 other albums that I had previously downloaded that were also in this state. Wow, hey Yahoo, thanks for telling me.

Fuck that. This whole notion of renting music is pretty interesting, but with all the crap that you have to deal with, and to top it off with music that can be arbitrarily taken away without warning… it’s just too much. I’m going back to iTunes.

Falling idols.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006 at or around 09:12 PM

Growing up, I tried hard to be the quintessential little goth kid. I loved The Cure, Bauhaus, and Siouxsie and the Banshies. I was defined by the music I listened to. And that was fine… as tends to happen, I grew out of it.

Except for Depeche Mode.

Man, I love those guys. Now, this happened to be fortunate for me, since as I was getting a little older, I was reaching a point in my life where I wasn’t always broke. So I went out and bought everything I could by them. Albums, singles, maxi-singles, EPs, Even one or two of those ridiculously expensive black boxes of singles. I was also fortunate enough to see them live 9 or 10 times. And it was great. They always put on a great show.

Fast forward 8 or 9 years, and Katie mentions to me that she’s never seen them, and that they’re coming back around again in support of the new album1. So she gets us cheap some lawn seats at shoreline, and off we go.

I guess it was a good show. But boy, I had a heard time shaking the fact that Dave and Martin looked so old. I also really thought his vocals seemed really rough (though kate strongly disagrees with me). And some of the songs they played (especially during the encore) seemed a little boring.

I guess it’s just different now. When I was 15 and it was my first concert, I was completely blown away. Now that I’m a little older, seeing the $40 t-shirts, the $9 beers, and sitting in what seems like 8 miles away, kinda doesn’t do it for me anymore.

 

 

1 which I don’t really like all that much, I gotta say—for my money, Songs of Faith and Devotion is their best album.

“It’s not me, it’s you”

Friday, February 20, 2009 at or around 06:33 PM
Tags:
  • Music

  • It's not me, it's you

    ★★ (/5)

    Picked this up this morning. It’s just OK for me. Seems a little over-produced vs. the previous album.

    edit: On a second listen through, demoting it from ★★★ to ★★.