Promethium Wrote:
I find it rather humorous you claim downloads reduce rock n roll to some kind of computer geek saddo hobby while posting it on an internet message board.
It's not really that funny if you understand what I'm talking about.
Writing an e-mail or posting on a message board is a perfectly acceptable way of communicating with other people. However when you 'computerize' music, or art in general, what you are really doing is snuffing out what makes it special in the first place.
No one would say you can truly appreciate say, just as an example, Jacques Louis David's
Oath of the Horatii by downloading a 400x500 pixel JPG of it from the internet in the same way that you could appreciate it if you saw the actual painting at the Louvre. Music is no different.
Rock n Roll is not digitizable just as in the same way a Xerox of your face isn't alive, it's just a lifeless reproduction with no human or physical element to it.
It's plainly obvious that live music, provided its performed well of course, is the best possible way to experience music. Although it is a step down the next best way to experience music is on the highest quality medium (such as vinyl) on the best available hi-fi equipment.
By the time you get to mp3's 'experienced' via iPods or PCs you have reached the worst possible way to listen to the music, the way that is such a wisp of the source, that's become so degenerate from the original, that it barely exists in any meaningful way, not even as pits and lands on the surface of a CD.
It's not called 'file sharing' for nothing. That's what music becomes when it's digitalized, a file, the same as any other file, a JPEG, an Excel spreadsheet, a Word document.
At the risk of sounding puffed up, I happen to think music is more than that, that it should affect you in a way that an Microsoft icon or a desktop wallpaper could never come close to.
So you see communicating via a message board is nothing like listening to music unless you want to flatter me by saying that what I write is art.