Home > Sync > Blog > My Online Life > Web/Tech > Do yourself a favour: buy some music online
OL April 29, 2008 at 2:43 pm

Do yourself a favour: buy some music online

By Comments (7)

As record labels struggle to revamp their businesses for an online world, consumers have an opportunity to shape the music industry – by voting with their pocket books.


Online_music As record labels struggle to revamp their businesses for an online world, consumers have an opportunity to shape the music industry – by voting with their pocket books.

There have been two rather odd announcements lately in the world of Canadian music retailing. The first came from Sony BMG. The company has started selling a product it calls the Platinum MusicPass. In Sony BMG’s plan, when you want to buy an album you drive to a store, buy a Platinum MusicPass card that corresponds to the album you want, drive back home and then enter the card’s secret code into the Sony BMG Web site. You then finally get to download the music you just bought.

If this seems convoluted, it is. If you have a computer at home, why not just buy the music online? And if you’re at the store anyway, why not buy the actual CD? That way you get a physical back-up copy of the music and you can rip it to iTunes or whatever in about the same time it would take to download it from Sony BMG.

The company says its scheme is worth your time because “in many cases” the Platinum MusicPass version will include special bonus content you can’t get on a CD. On the other hand, a recent check by Backbone found that while MusicPass albums cost $12.99, a random scan of 10 of the available MusicPass albums sold on iTunes for between $9.99 and $11.99. So the MusicPass idea leaves you balancing higher price, commute time and gas usage against the possibility of some extra content.

The second slightly odd music announcement comes from Empire Theatres. The company — and by the way, that’s “theatres” as in those places with expensive popcorn and sticky floors– just launched Songo.ca, an online catalogue of almost 2.5 million music downloads, arranged through a deal with Puretracks.

So, right now, if you buy a Concession Combo you get a card good for three free music downloads.

I have nothing against either Empire or songo.ca, I just find the business model to be a little odd: does heading out to watch Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay naturally lead to the consumer thinking “Hey, I would also like to pick up that new Theory of a Deadman CD?” Maybe it does. And do people want to drive out to a store to buy digital music they could have just downloaded directly at home? Maybe, although really I don’t think so.

But — and here’s my point — I like that music companies and retailers are trying out new models and looking for new ways to reach consumers. I believe that most people would buy music rather than downloading it illegally if it was easy, economical and fun to do so. iTunes has sold more than two billion songs, after all.

So go out and buy some digital music. The more people do this, the more incentive the industry has to come up with better delivery methods. And that will benefit musicians and consumers.

By Peter Wolchak

Backbone magazine


Filed Under: Web/Tech




Comments (7)

  • chance says:

    buying music digital is the dumbest and stupidest idea! I would much rather have the hard copy of it. What if your computer crashes and you lose all of your music you bought digitally? A hard copy is reliable, plain and simple computers are not. That's my personal opinion. And if you love music like i do then you buy the actual CD.

  • bigted says:

    I'm with chance – I will not spend good money on a CD without a hard copy. I have lost data with a computer crash. I have 40gig of paid for CDs that I would hate to have to rip again but at least I can if a disaster strikes.

  • Audiophile says:

    With my "pocket book", I will always vote for Hard Copy!!!

  • T-dogg says:

    I understand why people would want a hard copy, but most people have copies of their music on their MP3 players, so you aren't going to lose it anyways, and if you are that paranoid back it up like you would the rest of your files…..

  • Audiophile says:

    I have been collecting music on vinyl, tape, and CD for many years now. As a collector, I appreciate the great visual art that accompanies many albums, as well as the music, ofcourse. It's not paranoia, my friend, it's an obsession. :)

  • Hot Goalie says:

    I tried one purchase with iTunes. Had a problem with download I could not resolve, they never responded to request for support. Not good. I wasted $10 and will always go for hard copies from now on. What a burn.

  • Peter Wolchak says:

    I am actually really pleased to see so much passion for hard-copy music, even though it runs completely counter to my thesis.

    Yes, you can always burn digital music to a CD and therefore create a hard copy in case your computer crashes, and yes, with more than 2 billion songs sold on iTunes, digital music is obviously popular, but overall what I want for music fans is more music in more formats, and if actual CDs remain popular then that option will remain available for those who want it.

    Peter

Leave a comment!

You can subscribe to these comments via RSS.

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.

About Sync

Sync [singk] : harmony or harmonious relationship

Here at Sync, we strive to bring you the latest in news, reviews and opinions from the tech universe. It′s our way of helping to keep Canadians in sync with tech and gadgets that surround us in our daily lives. Never miss a beat: stay in Sync.

Read more about the bloggers.

/*YM SCRIPT*/ /*Bell SCRIPT*/