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Welcome to the GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. |
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Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed. |
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#51 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: A magical land
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Quote:
In fact, according to the RIAA, 70% of all music piracy happens offline. http://www.digitalmusicnews.com/perm...120726swapping It makes total sense. You can get your 'friend' to come round with his 2TB drive, and copy everything on it in 10 minutes. Imagine that, you, Paul Markham, being horribly wrong about something! |
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#52 | |
Too old to care
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Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: On the sofa, watching TV or doing my jigsaws.
Posts: 52,943
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What ever form the supply is, the obvious lesson is simple access to customers, traffic, isn't worth what people think it is. Some sensible reasons why this is true.
Access can lead to less need to pay for the product. If the online price were able fixed to the offline price or similar. Revenues would of gone through the roof. 100 people buying at $0.99 cents = $9.90. 1 person buying at $10.99 =$10.99. What ever way you twist it to make it fit your methods, it's true. It's an example and the only way you can twist it, is by making up numbers that clearly never were true. When 100 get it for free or pay a pirate for downloading. The revenue to the producers is $0.00. Fundamentally when people can get a product for free which satisfies their needs, very few give a thought to the producers. Often making excuses to justify their not paying for the product. They make too much money, they don't pay the producers enough, I find that one ironic used here, sing customers, blackmail, etc. Also extra access, means nothing if you don't have something worth buying. People are not as dumb as some would hope. They can spot a site with little to nothing to sell better than most professionals here. Evidence of that is this thread. https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1077966 Many were willing to give it a try. Even though when the sites were shown they changed their minds. The content isn't good, the sites seem to be very little content and many seem to of nosed dive. https://gfy.com/showpost.php?p=19121431&postcount=52 You don't need to split test those sites to know they suck. How many have to test a site to know if it sells or if they can sell it? Traffic is one step in selling and not a very big one. Having a product that sells well is far more important and more difficult than driving traffic to it. Whether you're online or have a shop on a street. Traffic is a step to selling and making a profit. Quote:
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#53 | |
Confirmed User
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Join Date: May 2010
Location: Manhattan
Posts: 4,016
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Quote:
I bought this record player for my mom on her birthday in May. It's kind of cool looking and converts the vinyl to digital. http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...RTMENT_ MUSIC She didn't want it though so she gave it to me with the understanding that at some point it would be my responsibility to convert all of her albums to digital. Sounds like it will be fun as shit but I'm still waiting for them to get the albums out of storage. lol Anyway, I've picked up about a dozen new albums at Urban Outfitters in the meantime and I really do enjoy the process of flipping through them at the store and everything else like you said. What's great is that the albums, at least all the ones I've bought, have also come with a direct mp3 download which is good because the quality when converting it from vinyl to digital on the Crowley is a bit lacking. I think it's also a great example of not only how it's possible to combine and repackage what is good from the old and what is good from the new. http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=20991485 http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=24674111 (I really like the album art on this one) http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=24713844 http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=24714073 http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=25281072 http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/urban...sp?id=25151523 Also Kid A. One of the best albums of all time with some of the best album art of all time. Here it is along with some of my other favorite covers. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Also all the beatles albums, the velvet underground warhol cover, the doors, appetite, 'Efil4zaggin'. Also the Lost Highway soundtrack which was in the late 90s. And this was never a cover but is just so brilliantly awesome in it's simplicity and definitely one of the most iconic music related images of the 80s. ![]()
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#54 |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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So, Paul, let's assume you're right, and the internet has ruined the record industry, why do you think the record industry is now seeing year on year increases it couldn't have dreamed of, thanks solely to digital sales. That is, sales on the internet?
I don't understand how 'the internet' can both ruin an industry and save it. It seems a tad incongruous to your specious argument (and I use the word argument very loosely). |
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#55 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: portland, OR
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Quote:
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#56 | |
Leaner, Meaner, Faster
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Join Date: Aug 2002
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Quote:
And yeah, piracy did hurt the sales of music. It's not fully responsible but it definitely devastated the financial rewards of being a "star" and took that dream away from most aspiring artists Look at Paul's graph. Look at the years in which the record industry basically tanked. It was the EXACT years that Napster and Kazaa were running wild. There is a reason that at The Grammys this year, the chairman of the Recording Academy actually pleaded with viewers to stop pirating music as it is destroying the entire industry. And also keep this in mind that I saw with my own two eyes: When I got old enough to play in bars with a fake ID in 1978...there were dozens of "rock clubs" in just a 50 mile radius of where I lived. And there were about a thousand gigs just in the state of Fla. alone to play LIVE music of every sort. Bands and musicians were everywhere, writing songs, playing out, honing our craft. That's all gone now. The drinking age rising up to 21 killed a lot of the club scene overnight back in 1980. But it was still very strong up until the mid 1990's, when people simply stopped going out to see live bands in the numbers they once did. My theory is that with the drinking age being 21 for so long...18, 19, and 20 year old adults never got to go out to clubs and see live music. So they were conditioned to listening to recorded music only for the first 3 years of adulthood. So the clubs catered to them and suddenly no more live music. ![]() And with their being no dreams of being a millionaire "rock star" anymore (the record companies are a shell of what they once were), and no place for bands to learn their craft(there is NO replacement for playing live in front of an audience 7 nights a week)...it pretty much has been a devestating "one-two punch" that has led to what you are referring to as "terrible music" When Rolling Stone magazine talks about DJ's being "artists" it makes me want to throw up. When rap stars talking over simple child like "beats" is called "music"...it's just a slap to the face of real musicians. In other words... ![]() |
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#57 |
(>^_^)b
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Join Date: Dec 2011
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lol I know that piracy is killing profits, I was just trolling
![]() "DJs" like Skrillex that get by with the same fucking sample on every song and think it's music are killing it, too.. What if bigger bands started doing things like say "Hey, we have a new album of songs out now, but we're only playing it at concerts for a year before releasing it and maybe a single or two on the radio."? Would that make more money for the artists from more people attending their shows with a possible increase of price if demand is high enough because of it and no piracy for a bit? ![]()
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#58 | |
Leaner, Meaner, Faster
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Quote:
Especially since album sales are such a small part of revenue for bigger bands. Hell, Van Halen put out their latest record a few months back. "A Different Kind Of Truth". The "single" that was released to the radio stations "Tattoo" was only an average sounding song that really takes a lot of listening to get you to like it. Not a good choice. But the rest of that album is fucking HOT. I mean it sounds really, really good. But the rock radio stations won't play it! Oh they'll play every old Van Halen song..but not the new one! Same with the last Rolling Stones record "A Bigger Bang" back in 2005. Rock radio played it the first day it came out. And then...never again! And that album is one of the best Stones records in 30 years. Awesome playing, songwriting, engineering, everything about it. I love classic rock. But why the hell doesn't the record companies PUSH these new albums more? Maybe because they don't have to? The Stones record sold 2.4 million copies with basically no radio support. But how many more COULD it have sold if more fans were given a chance to hear it? I played it in my car all the time of course. And my oldest daughter was 14 at the time the record came out. She was hearing it all the time when we drove somewhere. And for her birthday that year she had me buy her the CD too. She didn't know that it was music by "old" guys. She just knew she liked the songs. That's why rock is dying. They aren't getting the kids exposed to the music because they won't play any new songs by classic bands. Though I will say...with "Guitar Hero", both my daughters and all their friends now know hundreds of classic rock songs. lol I'm hearing a pack of 16 year olds all singing every word to "Mississippi Queen" by Mountain the other day! They know all those songs now thanks to Guitar Hero |
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#59 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: portland, OR
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Quote:
Most bands are not big enough to pull something like this off. Most bands need to release the singles in order to sell the records and get people out to their shows. |
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#60 |
Unregistered Abuser
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paul markham = music marketing expert
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#61 | |
Too old to care
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Quote:
Todays music is churned out fast, has to be easily disposed of and if possible can be reproduced on a stage. Would it still be like that if the Internet didn't exist? Yes, not as great as those days. Still good. Because the Internet wouldn't be giving it away for free or so cut price it's simply a conveyor belt business. Would it still be like that if the Internet piracy didn't exist? Yes, not as great as those days. Still good. Because the Internet wouldn't be giving it away for free or so cut price it's simply a conveyor belt business. Separating piracy from free is a red herring for pornsters. We give our product away for free. And eliminating piracy will have little effect on 90% of sites. The music industry would see a huge boost in revenue. |
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#62 | |
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If music were made well again, people would buy more of it. Truth is, most modern music is shit. You're right. |
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#63 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Quote:
Many of these bands that get dumped end up signing with smaller indie record labels. They are out there, they are just harder to find. |
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#64 |
Videochat Solutions
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I miss 78's
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#65 | |
Too old to care
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The Beatles had been playing for years before they released a single. This was normal then. Today it's a much faster climb and with little honed skills a very faster decline. The Beatles had been together how long before they produced Sgt Peppers? Same as so many great albums. Today they don't last that long a lot of the time. |
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#66 | |
Leaner, Meaner, Faster
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You're correct about bands not paying their dues these days...but you're exaggerating it a bit when you insinuate The Beatles were together a long time before they hit it big. 2 years is like the blink of an eye. But you're right when compared to today. Hell, look at Justin Bieber. lol Back when I was touring around the country I used to play a bar in Flynt Michigan called "The Silver Dollar Saloon". And on the wall were the contracts for all the bands throughout the years that played the club. Aerosmith played there, ZZ Top, Rush, Kiss, etc. And you'd see where they played all week long for $1,500 lol That's back when bands used to pay their dues playing clubs all over the country for very little money and honing their craft in front of live audiences. |
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#67 | |
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Yes, gone are the days when record labels developed talent and let them hone their skills, but even if those days still existed it doesn't mean there would be another Beatles. Oh, and the Beatles formed in 1960. They released a single in 1962 "Love me Do" and their first full length album in 1963 which had iconic hits on it like the aforementioned "Love me Do," "Twist and Shout" and "I Saw Her Standing There". I wouldn't necessarily quantify 2-3 years of playing together as "playing for years." Genius is genius. All the practice in the world can't create that. |
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#68 |
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#69 | |
Not making A Comeback
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Posts: 10,218
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Yay every crappy highschool band can record at home and put shitty music up somewhere and then have to get real jobs because there is even less money today for them then there was before. Don't piss on my leg and tell me it's raining. There are favorable aspects of the new order and there are totally fucked aspects. It is what it is and it's just lucky there is a secondary currency of groupie blowjobs to make it at all enticing.. |
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#70 | ||
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Pick a point I've made and make a counterpoint. Don't just say I'm wrong and then throw up some straw men. Alternatively artists now have a free distribution medium that allows them to sell their product directly, to anyone, anywhere in the world. Quote:
Did you know an artist only has to sell 143 self pressed CDs at 9.99 to make monthly minimum wage in the US? |
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#71 | ||
Too old to care
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Quote:
Still I see your point. They were experienced before thrown into the charts. we did have a few over night bands in the 60s and 70s, they came and went. Very fast. |
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#72 | |
Too old to care
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The Who Kinks James Brown The Beach Boys The Supremes The Rolling Stones Bob Dylan Aretha Franklin Elvis Presley Sam Cooke The Jimi Hendrix Experience Ray Charles Otis Redding The Temptations Smokey Robinson & The Miracles The Byrds Marvin Gaye The Four Seasons Wilson Pickett Stevie Wonder Roy Orbison Doors The Four Tops Led Zeppelin Martha & The Vandellas Dion Jefferson Airplane The Mamas & The Papas Sam & Dave Solomon Burke Cream Jackie Wilson Creedence Clearwater Revival Booker T & The MG's Sly & The Family Stone The Monkees The Yardbirds Chubby Checker Simon & Garfunkel The Lovin' Spoonful Janis Joplin The Animals Mary Wells Ike & Tina Turner The Band Lee Dorsey The Velvet Underground Junior Walker & The All-Stars The Jackson Five The Righteous Brothers Buffalo Springfield Few more here. http://www.digitaldreamdoor.com/page...rtists60s.html Compare the lists http://www.digitaldreamdoor.com/page...rtists00s.html |
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#73 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: portland, OR
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Still, I'm not sure what the point of all this is in relation to streaming music revenue being up. If you are trying to prove that the 60's had better music than the 00's you might be right. There are a lot of artists I like on that list, but some I think are overrated as well. It is all subjective. Show me one person who thinks The Doors are the greatest band in the world and that Rap is total shit and I can likely find someone who thinks Eminem is the greatest artist ever and that the Doors were just a group of lucky drunks. It doesn't mean either party is wrong. |
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#74 | |
Too old to care
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Join Date: Jun 2001
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Quote:
Streaming revenues may be up. Online porn overtook offline. Then plunged. It's total income we're talking about and that's clear in both industries. |
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#75 |
Unregistered Abuser
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no traffic and no sales in porn
but hey youre a fucking expert on the online music industry now paul! |
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#76 |
Unregistered Abuser
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#77 |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Yup. The music industry spend decades fucking over its customers. Then the internet came along and saved them.
Still unsure of what your actual point is, aside from all the reasons you have been giving as to why the internet has saved the record industry??? |
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#78 |
Unregistered Abuser
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paul doesnt have a point. He just chooses a topic and starts talking.
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