I have been trying to find new music lately, but I find it extremely difficult to actually purchase any music I want to buy. For example:
Today I decided to do a search for 'symphonic metal with female vocals". I struck gold with this Youtube video:
Top 10 symphonic metal female vocalists! Yes!
...ok lets wikipedia each vocalist and find their bands.
Ok now let's type in their band name into bandcamp.com, hdtracks.com and go to their official sites.
Well...each and every one did not show up on either site (they already 'made it' yet were not main stream enough for hdtracks), and their official store pages either offered to sell me a CD, or pointed me to iTunes (or Amazon). Disappointing. I could not (reasonably) purchase one album! I mean: Really??? What the hell??? By 'reasonably' I mean I am not paying extra to ship a CD from wherever, and not giving money to Apple for a lesser quality copy.
With all of our technology today the only term that can be used is it is a complete 'cluster F..." to buy music these days. I think we really need to make a push as a community to get music distribution out of this dark age.
First off: CDs are dead, yet they are still a primary form of distribution for artists. I have looked up a few artists I had interest in and they only had CDs on their main website store pages. Other than that there was a link to iTunes for a digital download option (more on that abomination in a bit).
The other main form of distribution is ITunes or Amazon, and maaaaaybe Google play. All 3 'vendors' are just not suitable for digital music purchases. bandcamp.com and HDtracks.com are probably the main site for digital purchases. Bandcamp is great....for new artists, but once an artist has 'made it big', they won't use that site. On the other hand, hdtracks.com falls a bit short in its own way. Sure they won't have every artist out there, but it would be nice to search for details other than artist name or music type. Perhaps I am looking for female vocals. Perhaps of a certain nationality. As it is their search function isn't the greatest as it returns a mess of possible hits, rather than something a bit more organized.
Second: .mp3
Let us put music quality to the side for a second...
.mp3 was developed as a digital medium to save space due to the state of storage technology in the early 90s. Today, you can have at least 64GB of memory in a PORTABLE device, if not 128GB. That is at least 64 full, uncompressed CDs plus 30% free space for other storage. .flac can compress a CD up to 50% on top of that. The storage savings of .mp3 is no longer needed.
On top of that, as far as I understand, there are still active patents on .mp3 encoding and decoding technology. Because mp3 is (somehow) still the standard for digital content, it is costing companies and consumers unnecessary extra cost in licensing fees.
So the main advantage of .mp3 has not been needed for a long time, it costs extra to use, and is of inferior quality to .flac, yet it is still the standard format in music and shows no signs of going away. That is just messed up on a whole nother level.
Third: the abomination known as iTunes
iTunes is probably the single most prominent perpetrator of the outdated .mp3 standard. Backing up a bit, iTunes is in itself an abomination of a 'store' or distribution system. It requires its own software to use, perpetuates its own proprietary formats and technologies, and only gives a limited use license that is non transferable and expires upon your death. The music buying experience was far easier in the late 90s by going to the mall and checking out the various music stores. With iTunes, you get a proprietary, controlled environment, that sells predominantly a substandard product (unless something is available in apple lossless codec).
Fourth: Distribution is based on a philosophy that America is the primary/only market
It seems nearly impossible to throw money at artists these days, unless they are in the main stream. Even then it can be hard, since I am in Canada and there are region distribution restrictions.
Let's start with the basics:
Queen: A night at the Opera
There is the original album, plus 2 remastered versions. I found myself missing this album after giving it away during a move years ago, so I decided to buy it again. HDTracks.com: "This product is not currently available due to region restrictions". My only option would be to go to iTunes or to order the CD and pay shipping. Essentially pay a higher price for 16bit/44.1khz than the 24 bit/96khz download....
Ok, let's see how bad this region restriction nonsense is:
I Look up Sarah McLaughlan, a legendary Canadian singer, on hdtracks. "This product is not currently available due to region restrictions". REALLY?? I can't purchase content from a Canadian artist because I am in Canada?
I know it has nothing to do with the origin of the artist, but with what distribution agreements the IP holder has. Essentially these IP holders try and maximize profits by charging different rates for different world regions, but in the end: people outside of the US have a hard time throwing money at content they want to buy and end up pirating the content. Game of Thrones and HBO go is a good example. Canadians can't get HBO go so have to pay $100+ dollars a month for a full cable subscription OR commit fraud by using a VPN to a US server, and paying for the HBO online service....or wait for the dvd or blu ray of the season.
In conclusion:
We really need to get together as a community to deal with the sad state of music distribution, and....well...burn it with fire. We really need to call on artists to STOP using iTunes, and use the variety of online stores out there. We also need to work with stores such as HD tracks to get a better user interface (i.e. a wealth of information tags to search through) and make a push to overtake iTunes as the primary distribution service.