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Is the next best thing good enough for you?

Zen Deltas column about Jazz in BangkokA “Listen Up!” column by Zen Delta
Will the Internet kill the music labels and put the smile back on your face?
A couple of things. First, bandwidth (the amount of data that can be shoved through a wire, or a channel on a satellite) will increase rapidly. You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to figure that out. It’s already happening. Cable companies are starting to give people high speed access to the Internet. DSL is making it possible for high speed connections through the phone lines you already have in your home.

And still to come, some really big, fat wires (the backbone), carrying dizzying amounts of data. As that happens, Moore’s law kicks in, and the price of high-speed access will drop dramatically. Agreed.

As the entrees hit the table, my dinner companion continued. The non-music boffins think that the increased bandwidth will make it possible for consumers to get music on demand. In other words, any song you want, at any time you want. I think they are right. That could very well result in the de-commoditization of music. At present, music is something you buy to own. But why physically own it if you can just “get” it any time you want it? Sounds logical right?

But the ‘experts’ are also convinced that as bandwidth becomes cheaper and more available, the supply of music will become almost infinite. Okay, we’re seeing evidence of that now. They think that as that happens, “the filter on the front end of the pipe will disappear, and be transplanted to the back end.”

Let me translate. That means that as the music industry exists right now, record companies act as front-end filters, bringing consumers only the music that the labels feel has a high probability of commercial success. That’s understandable. They have a finite amount of resources, and can’t afford to sign everything under the sun. After all, they’re in business to make a profit.

The boffins argue that the public will become the so-called filter when any and all music is available to all people. I can hear the cheering now. “No more A&R weasels deciding if the public gets to decide if they like my music!” “No more radio programmers pushing that crap down the throats of the public!” Understandable feelings.

Reality check.

Let’s take a moment and admit to ourselves that the “unfiltered” world of entertainment may only be entertaining because it’s so unbelievably bad. It’s a curio that quickly grows tiresome.

There’s no doubt that we like choice. But we’re picky. We only want to choose from the best. Humans of all shapes, sizes, colors and creeds like quality. While the record companies may over-filter, filters still appear to be necessary.

Which of these would you choose? Getting in your car and having an unlimited number of radio stations to choose from that all have unfiltered music ranging from absolutely terrible to sure-fire hits, or an unlimited number of stations that are aggregated by genre or mixed genres, and play music that ranges from possible hits to sure-fire hits? Unless you’re a masochist, the latter seems to be the wise choice.

Who would have the time or patience to listen to thousands of mediocre or terrible songs to find the hidden gems?

Part of what will make the future of music more interesting is that narrowing the focus while giving more choice will only be a good thing for music makers and music buyers. If you love ukulele music, you’ll be able to find it at ukulele music.com. If you like bagpipes, you’ll be able to quickly find the digital station that features them. If you’re frustrated that no record companies will sign, and no radio stations will play your gothic flute music, lament no more. Big, fast digital pipes that foster the growth of tiny little niches are coming our way soon.

And I see that as a very good thing for all of us.

But we will all still need our latest favorite album…right?

Zen Delta is Creative Director of ACMEBROADC@ST MARKETING SERVICES which specializes in providing writing, editing, graphic design, printing, promotion + publicity services as well as publishing, web design, photography, film and music production. Contact: postmaster@acmebroadcast.tvheaven.com.

Zen Delta’s Listen Up! column is sponsored by:
AmceBroadcast provides writing, editing, graphic design, printing, promotion and publicity services in Asia.

One Response to 'Is the next best thing good enough for you?'

  1. Bob Says:

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    SAMART — Local 512/256: 750 บาท/เดือน 256/128 520 บาท/เดือน
    QNET — ใครๆก็ใช้ ADSLได้สมัครวันนี้เริ่มต้นที่ 380 บ. เท่านั้น
    TOT — TOT Broadband Super 256/128 ราคา 500 บาทต่อเดือน ฟรีค่าแรกเข้า 1000 บาท
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