Bob Seger ticked me off in 2006
In the almost totally selfish interest of uploading new content to the blog without doing much work, I present a post I wrote three years ago about Bob Seger and his (then) refusal to allow users to download tracks off of his albums; instead, they would be forced to download the whole thing, which was basically Radiohead’s model on Rhapsody up until a couple of years ago. I never ended up posting it anywhere, so it is new content (sort of).
At any rate, here is my post, entitled, “Greed is greed no matter how you disguise it.” Enjoy.
To the chagrin of music executives across the country, services such as iTunes, Napster, and eMusic have changed the way that consumers value albums. Between radio airplay and the ability to purchase tracks à la carte, the consumer now is free to take what he or she likes from an album and ignore the rest of it. Artists and producers no longer can benefit from throwing a few garbage tracks in between a handful of decent ones and calling it an “album” with a straight face.
For anyone familiar with the decline of the music industry, though, this should come as no surprise. Since the glory years during the 1990s, a decade the music industry would love to revisit because of soaring compact disc sales, consumers realized that paying $15 for an album with three decent tracks and nine inaudible ones was not money well spent. Thus, technological advances + demand for individual tracks spawned the online music industry.
Aside from the Beatles and Led Zeppelin (who have been reluctant to embrace any new technology or licensing agreements), most artists have seen the value in the new digital marketplace and have adapted to it. However, there still are some dinosaurs roaming the music landscape, and after I read this article about Bob Seger, I was reminded that artists are willing to exploit their fans if it means pocketing a few more dollars.
“Seger, the legendary rocker from Michigan who entered the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004, is considering releasing his classic 1976 album ‘Night Moves,’ but wants to make it so it only can be downloaded as an album, Andrews said.”
The quote above was taken from this article:
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/ptech/08/21/itunes.holdouts.ap/index.html
I have accepted the usual line that comes with the “album only” idea. The great artist does not want to hurt the integrity of his or her work by splitting it into single tracks. The artist’s belief that his or her work is incomplete unless experienced from start to finish is a fine idea, if it were consistently enforced. Artists like Seger, though, also are willing to cut the highlights from their work and paste them together for their “Greatest Hits” albums.
For instance, Seger’s landmark album Night Moves features nine songs. Two of them appear on his first greatest hits disc (“Night Moves” and “Mainstreet”) and three more show up on the second greatest hits disc (“The Fire Down Below,” “Sunspot Baby,” and “Rock & Roll Never Forgets”). So, five of the nine songs on his career-defining album already have been split into two different greatest hits albums. If he were so concerned about the integrity of his work, why issue two greatest hits discs? Well, for more money, of course. By throwing in “previously unreleased” material, he and his record company hope to sucker fans into spending more money on material of which they own the majority anyway.
Purchasing individual tracks clearly would solve this issue. The consumer could purchase the tracks he or she does not own already and move along without paying twice for much of the same music. This is, after all, one of the reasons that download services are so successful, and it is ideal for consumers who value the music they already own on other formats, such as cassette tape and vinyl.
I also have trouble taking Seger seriously when he argues for “album integrity.” This is the same man who licensed his Diet Coke rock ballad “Like a Rock” to Chevrolet for about a decade. I remember living in four different areas of the country throughout my life and hearing his song during Chevy truck commercials. His song was licensed, by itself, for a decade. However, someone who owns both an iPod and a Chevy truck could not log in to iTunes and purchase the track by itself, legally, to rock out to it with the windows down.
If artists such as Bob Dylan, Neil Young, and the Rolling Stones can embrace and benefit from using 21st Century technology to sell music, there is no reason why someone like Seger should be taken seriously for being a stick in the mud.
Tags: 2006, bob seger, emusic, greed, iTunes, Music, music snob, napster, radiohead, Rants
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March 1, 2009 at 3:23 pm
looks like you had a lot more time on your hands in 2006
November 24, 2009 at 10:03 pm
Artists like Seger are also happy to have individual songs played on radio stations.
I’m willing to accept the idea that certain albums, especially in the jazz world, were conceived-of as a single creative unit, for example, Miles’ Sketches of Spain. But let’s face it, you can even buy individual MOVEMENTS of symphonies and chamber works in classical music (although I’ve never done that and don’t know why anyone would). So efforts by artists like Seger, Aerosmith, Boz Scaggs, and others to force people to buy the whole album to get one song are ridiculous, as well as transparent in their greediness.
Many of us would prefer to pay a reasonable price for a song so the artist and production people can receive payment for their efforts. But if the artist and label won’t meet the music-buying public halfway, and OFFER individual songs for sale, we ALL know many alternative ways of getting the music we want.
Many of Seger’s songs have nostalgia themes. Singing about some sweet golden past of our youth is one thing, but trying to cling to music distribution models that went past their fresh date in 1998 fails.
February 9, 2010 at 2:24 am
Frankly I could hardly care less. Artists no longer make real money on recordings any more anyway, now they must do it the old fashion way and gig and perform. Long gone on the days of 1967 when the Beatles could drops LSD and use headphones as microphones in the name of creativity as they stayed inside for months getting high and spinning records backwards.
I do agree that the 1974 Album Night moves is best listened too from start to finish. But these post napster days when people download perfectly flawless flac and wave downloads in minutes means the people that BUY recorded music rarely have too. Many albums by big artists are online for download weeks before they hit Walmart.
I think an artist should be able to offer for sale their music in any shape or form they desire- One entire album only? Then let them suffer the loss in sales and increase in free downloads. Neither the record companies nor the artists are in control of the recorded music market anymore- a 5 year old can download free music that is for sale in walmart.
I too have my own music online for sale and I know how widespread free downloading is. I bet Bob Seger was surprised after his 11 year vacation and he actually put some real work in a producing a compact disc post napster, only to find out everyone already owned a copy before it hit the stores. Lady Ga Ga sales a few, but only because millions CHOOSE to be honest and pay for her stuff, and it may not last forever.
Long gone are the days of young adults dropping $150 bucks a check for a few CDs on pay-day. And we have millions of great tunes recorded before P2P computer programs took away their profits. Now most artists have to find real jobs or, if their lucky, they can live off of money made during the Mtv Compact Disc boom a couple decades back. Hell, Kid Rock is one of the few artists left that actually seems to try to produce an album worth buying these days (IMHO). Sometimes I wonder why the ones that do even bother.