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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in
retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. The RIAA's been too successful in shutting down its free shop window. Graham |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. Knowing about the sales pop during the Napster days was a matter of having one's ears open at the time. Music has been free as long as there has been radio. Recorded music has been available at terrific discounts from record store prices as long as there have been home audio recorders. I remember taping radio and LPs back in the late 50s. Therefore there's nothing new about people bootlegging popular music. All Napster did is decrease the time and effort required for bootleggng, at the cost of having music in a format that might be harder to listen to when you were away from your PC. There may have also been SQ issues, some pretty severe. A lot of people learned about music that was new to them via MP3 downloads and exchanges, and ran right out and bought the CDs so they could enjoy the music bette. Guilty as charged! What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. Contrary to some people's apparent belief, college folks don't define the market for music. College students are only a minority of all people who buy music. They often don't have a lot of disposable income. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Feb 12, 11:15 am, Eeyore
wrote: CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. Napster operated as a free service from 1999 until 2001. RIAA shipments: 1999: 939 million units 2001: 882 million units bob |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "bob" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 12, 11:15 am, Eeyore wrote: CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. Napster operated as a free service from 1999 until 2001. RIAA shipments: 1999: 939 million units 2001: 882 million units Note that the dates in question cover 2or 3 years, but there's data for just one year. Note that Napster was not the only relevant variable during that time. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. Knowing about the sales pop during the Napster days was a matter of having one's ears open at the time. Exactly. Music has been free as long as there has been radio. Recorded music has been available at terrific discounts from record store prices as long as there have been home audio recorders. Of course. I remember taping radio and LPs back in the late 50s. As do I, but in the late 60s and early 70s. Therefore there's nothing new about people bootlegging popular music. All Napster did is decrease the time and effort required for bootleggng, at the cost of having music in a format that might be harder to listen to when you were away from your PC. There may have also been SQ issues, some pretty severe. I think that you've understate this case. The SQ issue is a MAJOR difference between recording off the radio with a cassette recorder (what most people had) and a digital download. A lot of people learned about music that was new to them via MP3 downloads and exchanges, and ran right out and bought the CDs so they could enjoy the music bette. Guilty as charged! As I said, there's no solid evidence that this happened in large numbers. What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. Contrary to some people's apparent belief, college folks don't define the market for music. College students are only a minority of all people who buy music. Last I looked, the 10-24 demographic was the largest segment of the recorded music buying population. They often don't have a lot of disposable income. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article .com,
"bob" wrote: On Feb 12, 11:15 am, Eeyore wrote: CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. Napster operated as a free service from 1999 until 2001. RIAA shipments: 1999: 939 million units 2001: 882 million units bob And of course, other P2P services operate even today. |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Jenn said: college aged people They often don't have a lot of disposable income. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. Darn right. If that were the standard, Arnii Krooger could be excused for filching cash from the collection plate at church. -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. Knowing about the sales pop during the Napster days was a matter of having one's ears open at the time. Exactly. Admission that you were out of the loop at the time Jenn? Music has been free as long as there has been radio. Recorded music has been available at terrific discounts from record store prices as long as there have been home audio recorders. Of course. I remember taping radio and LPs back in the late 50s. As do I, but in the late 60s and early 70s. Therefore there's nothing new about people bootlegging popular music. All Napster did is decrease the time and effort required for bootleggng, at the cost of having music in a format that might be harder to listen to when you were away from your PC. There may have also been SQ issues, some pretty severe. I think that you've understate this case. The SQ issue is a MAJOR difference between recording off the radio with a cassette recorder (what most people had) and a digital download. Again Jenn avoids relevant facts that have been presented (example home recording from consumer media with excellent quality). After all, where do most of the MP3s come from from consumers transcribing recordings they have purchased or borrowed? A lot of people learned about music that was new to them via MP3 downloads and exchanges, and ran right out and bought the CDs so they could enjoy the music bette. Guilty as charged! As I said, there's no solid evidence that this happened in large numbers. Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. Contrary to some people's apparent belief, college folks don't define the market for music. College students are only a minority of all people who buy music. Last I looked, the 10-24 demographic was the largest segment of the recorded music buying population. Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? They often don't have a lot of disposable income. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. Is it stealing music to listen to the radio? Am I stealing from the History Channel when I time-shift some of their programs? Is it stealing music when people make their own music videos from commercial audio recordings and post them on YouTube? |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? It looks very much like those well-known emperor's clothes labelled DVD-A, SACD and vinyl have been found out by more and more of the music-loving public. The major technological changes that relate to LP in the last year or so include: (1) Dance music manipulation devices that don't need a vinyl LP to operate. (2) More and more people seem to be digitizing LPs. |
#13
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() The Krooborg is itching for a tussle. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. Is it stealing music to listen to the radio? Am I stealing from the History Channel when I time-shift some of their programs? Is it stealing music when people make their own music videos from commercial audio recordings and post them on YouTube? Show of hands: How many RAOers think it's a crying shame that there's no rating system for "debating trade" warriors? I think Arnii is deserving of a first-degree Brown Belt. -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? It looks very much like those well-known emperor's clothes labelled DVD-A, SACD and vinyl have been found out by more and more of the music-loving public. Or perhaps that public has shifted to online buying because of much better selection, and the remaining B&M stores are dropping their stock. The major technological changes that relate to LP in the last year or so include: (1) Dance music manipulation devices that don't need a vinyl LP to operate. Okay (2) More and more people seem to be digitizing LPs. Your basis for statement #2? I can see where #1 might have relevance to LP sales (but not SACD or DVD-A). What relevance does #2 have to sales of anything (other than electronics)? |
#15
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message . com ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. No Arny, I'm not changing the subject. I'm simply recalling, to the best of my ability, Harry's point. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. Knowing about the sales pop during the Napster days was a matter of having one's ears open at the time. Exactly. Admission that you were out of the loop at the time Jenn? Not at all Arny. I simply spend a great deal of time with the age group who seems to do the most illegal downloading. Music has been free as long as there has been radio. Recorded music has been available at terrific discounts from record store prices as long as there have been home audio recorders. Of course. I remember taping radio and LPs back in the late 50s. As do I, but in the late 60s and early 70s. Therefore there's nothing new about people bootlegging popular music. All Napster did is decrease the time and effort required for bootleggng, at the cost of having music in a format that might be harder to listen to when you were away from your PC. There may have also been SQ issues, some pretty severe. I think that you've understated (spelling corrected) this case. The SQ issue is a MAJOR difference between recording off the radio with a cassette recorder (what most people had) and a digital download. Again Jenn avoids relevant facts that have been presented (example home recording from consumer media with excellent quality). After all, where do most of the MP3s come from from consumers transcribing recordings they have purchased or borrowed? Look 5 paragraphs up, Arny. You mentioned taping from the radio. That's what I was referring to. A lot of people learned about music that was new to them via MP3 downloads and exchanges, and ran right out and bought the CDs so they could enjoy the music bette. Guilty as charged! As I said, there's no solid evidence that this happened in large numbers. Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". I said, "There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster." Do you have evidence to the contrary? What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. Contrary to some people's apparent belief, college folks don't define the market for music. College students are only a minority of all people who buy music. Last I looked, the 10-24 demographic was the largest segment of the recorded music buying population. Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Troll ignored. They often don't have a lot of disposable income. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. Is it stealing music to listen to the radio? Nope. The recording "chain" gives it's permission to use their recordings in this way, and they derive income from this use. Am I stealing from the History Channel when I time-shift some of their programs? Nope. That's referred to as fair use. Is it stealing music when people make their own music videos from commercial audio recordings and post them on YouTube? That's about to be debated in the courts. Stay tuned. |
#16
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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"Arny Krueger" said:
Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. In your glee to report the demise of "Hi-rez" and vinyl, you're overlooking the fact that less music overall is sold. Which, in turn, can mean two things: people find their music through other (illegal?) channels, of they listen less. Sad, indeed, that you seem to enjoy this. -- - Maggies are an addiction for life. - |
#17
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In article ,
Sander deWaal wrote: "Arny Krueger" said: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. In your glee to report the demise of "Hi-rez" and vinyl, you're overlooking the fact that less music overall is sold. Which, in turn, can mean two things: people find their music through other (illegal?) channels, of they listen less. Sad, indeed, that you seem to enjoy this. Last I looked, legal downloads (iTunes, etc) were way up. Clearly this is the way of the future. Indeed, it seems to be the way of the present! As I've expressed before here, I'd rather shop in 3D most of the time, but obviously I'm in the minority. |
#18
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Harry Lavo" wrote in message . .. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? It looks very much like those well-known emperor's clothes labelled DVD-A, SACD and vinyl have been found out by more and more of the music-loving public. Or perhaps that public has shifted to online buying because of much better selection, and the remaining B&M stores are dropping their stock. The major technological changes that relate to LP in the last year or so include: (1) Dance music manipulation devices that don't need a vinyl LP to operate. Okay (2) More and more people seem to be digitizing LPs. Your basis for statement #2? Since I used the word seem, this could be nothing more than a perception of mine. However there is a factual basis for this - the frequency of questions about digitzing vinyl posted and Usenet, the profusion of web pages about it, the number of products that facilitate it, conversations with people in real life, etc. I can see where #1 might have relevance to LP sales (but not SACD or DVD-A). Good. What relevance does #2 have to sales of anything (other than electronics)? It's quite a bit easier to exchange digital copies of LPs than copy them by other means... |
#19
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On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 18:10:31 GMT, Jenn
wrote: Is it stealing music when people make their own music videos from commercial audio recordings and post them on YouTube? That's about to be debated in the courts. Stay tuned. Well, it wouldn't be stealing for the person who made the video, unless it could be proved that he or she used the video to make money in some fashion outside of YouTube (this *might* be argued if the video was linked to a commercial site). YouTube could be considered liable however, since their display of the material could be argued to support their operation from a financial standpoint. After all, even non-profit, non-commercial radio stations have to pay royalties. |
#20
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" said: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. In your glee Sue me for being in favor of logic and reason, and against empty claims. to report the demise of "Hi-rez" and vinyl, you're overlooking the fact that less music overall is sold. Yeah, total sales of music overall are have *fallen* to the point where "Total Digital And Physical" sales are *up* almost 30%. LOL! Hint to anybody who wants to see Sander's latest lies laid bare - read the numbers on the bottom line of the cited reference, looking hard for the number 29.9. Which, in turn, can mean two things: people find their music through other (illegal?) channels, of they listen less. Obviously a *fact* made up to suit Sander's paranoid fears. Seems to be common to LP bigots, as Jenn seems to be suggesting the same lie. Sad, indeed, that you seem to enjoy this. Completely contrived personal attack, based in an obvious lie, noted. |
#21
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![]() "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message . com ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. No Arny, I'm not changing the subject. I'm simply recalling, to the best of my ability, Harry's point. Since you have that memory problem Jenn, Harry has be known to say things like: "SACD sales ... have been growing rapidly by all accounts. ... " "In the first half, DVD-Audio sales were up..." "... combined unit sales will catch up with and equal CD sales." "...SACD takes hold, we probably ill NOT be having this debate five years in the future. ... " The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. CD sales went up when Napster and the like were free. snip There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster. Knowing about the sales pop during the Napster days was a matter of having one's ears open at the time. Exactly. Admission that you were out of the loop at the time Jenn? Not at all Arny. I simply spend a great deal of time with the age group who seems to do the most illegal downloading. Since you seem to have expanded college age to be everybody from 10 to 24... Music has been free as long as there has been radio. Recorded music has been available at terrific discounts from record store prices as long as there have been home audio recorders. Of course. I remember taping radio and LPs back in the late 50s. As do I, but in the late 60s and early 70s. Therefore there's nothing new about people bootlegging popular music. All Napster did is decrease the time and effort required for bootleggng, at the cost of having music in a format that might be harder to listen to when you were away from your PC. There may have also been SQ issues, some pretty severe. I think that you've understated (spelling corrected) this case. The SQ issue is a MAJOR difference between recording off the radio with a cassette recorder (what most people had) and a digital download. Again Jenn avoids relevant facts that have been presented (example home recording from consumer media with excellent quality). After all, where do most of the MP3s come from from consumers transcribing recordings they have purchased or borrowed? Look 5 paragraphs up, Arny. You mentioned taping from the radio. That's what I was referring to. And then I mentioned taping, and then I mentioned music on the PC, and Distortion of facts by means of out-of-context quotes noted. A lot of people learned about music that was new to them via MP3 downloads and exchanges, and ran right out and bought the CDs so they could enjoy the music bette. Guilty as charged! As I said, there's no solid evidence that this happened in large numbers. Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". I said, "There's no evidence that I'm aware of that any bump in sales was due to Napster." Do you have evidence to the contrary? You also upped the ante to "solid evidence". Here's some interestnig evidence: http://www.cesifo-group.de/pls/guest...fo1_wp1122.pdf "As a consequence, the recent legal actions and the development of technical measures of protection of musical CDs carried by copyright owners may be badly motivated. Besides, there are reasons to believe that the music industry might actually benefit from digital distribution. Indeed, numerous surveys (documented in Peitz and Waelbroeck 2003b) highlight the potential sampling role of digital copies." What is clear is that when you talked to college aged people (particularly before iTunes and other pay-per-song services) is that their hard drives were full of illegal tracks, and that they almost never bought music anymore. Contrary to some people's apparent belief, college folks don't define the market for music. College students are only a minority of all people who buy music. Last I looked, the 10-24 demographic was the largest segment of the recorded music buying population. Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Troll ignored. Jenn dismisses questions that she doesn't want to answer in order to avoid accountability for her actions. They often don't have a lot of disposable income. No kidding, but this doesn't entitle them to steal music, of course. Is it stealing music to listen to the radio? Nope. The recording "chain" gives it's permission to use their recordings in this way, and they derive income from this use. But there is evidence shown above, that they may derive income from "sampling" of commercial LPs. Am I stealing from the History Channel when I time-shift some of their programs? Nope. That's referred to as fair use. Depends who's talking. Is it stealing music when people make their own music videos from commercial audio recordings and post them on YouTube? That's about to be debated in the courts. Stay tuned. |
#22
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![]() Troll ignored. "Arny Krueger" said: "Sander deWaal" wrote in message .. . "Arny Krueger" said: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. In your glee Sue me for being in favor of logic and reason, and against empty claims. to report the demise of "Hi-rez" and vinyl, you're overlooking the fact that less music overall is sold. Yeah, total sales of music overall are have *fallen* to the point where "Total Digital And Physical" sales are *up* almost 30%. LOL! Hint to anybody who wants to see Sander's latest lies laid bare - read the numbers on the bottom line of the cited reference, looking hard for the number 29.9. Which, in turn, can mean two things: people find their music through other (illegal?) channels, of they listen less. Obviously a *fact* made up to suit Sander's paranoid fears. Seems to be common to LP bigots, as Jenn seems to be suggesting the same lie. Sad, indeed, that you seem to enjoy this. Completely contrived personal attack, based in an obvious lie, noted. -- - Maggies are an addiction for life. - |
#23
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Feb 12, 2:10 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject... Since you have that memory problem Jenn... Again Jenn avoids relevant facts... Distortion of facts by means of out-of-context quotes noted... Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Jenn dismisses questions that she doesn't want to answer in order to avoid accountability for her actions. I have listed your contributions above to this thread, Mr. Krueger, to reveal the inherent nastiness in your dealings with Jenn. Are you trying to drive yet another r.a.o. poster away? Take a chill pill, please. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#24
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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"John Atkinson" said:
On Feb 12, 2:10 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject... Since you have that memory problem Jenn... Again Jenn avoids relevant facts... Distortion of facts by means of out-of-context quotes noted... Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Jenn dismisses questions that she doesn't want to answer in order to avoid accountability for her actions. I have listed your contributions above to this thread, Mr. Krueger, to reveal the inherent nastiness in your dealings with Jenn. Are you trying to drive yet another r.a.o. poster away? Take a chill pill, please. Arny has an irrational fear of women, and Jenn in particular. When she announced her return to RAO, dark clouds accumulated in the Michigan skies. And the Lord sent blizzards upon Grosse Pointe, and Arny quivered in fear, and there was wailing and the gnashing of teeth. -- - Maggies are an addiction for life. - |
#25
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message . com ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. No Arny, I'm not changing the subject. I'm simply recalling, to the best of my ability, Harry's point. Since you have that memory problem Jenn, Harry has be known to say things like: "SACD sales ... have been growing rapidly by all accounts. ... " "In the first half, DVD-Audio sales were up..." "... combined unit sales will catch up with and equal CD sales." "...SACD takes hold, we probably ill NOT be having this debate five years in the future. ... " If you are going to quote me Arny, please have the decency to provide a citation....so that I and others can see them in context. And for that matter, to confirm that I EVER said combined unit sales of anything was going to catch up and equal CD sales. You sure you are not just making all this up...if you fail to provide quotes then I will have to assume you are? |
#26
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. I wonder if the dearth of new major label releases has anything to do with it. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. As it always has, just as high quality cassettes outsold lps in the eighties. Stephen |
#27
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Harry Lavo" wrote in message . .. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? It looks very much like those well-known emperor's clothes labelled DVD-A, SACD and vinyl have been found out by more and more of the music-loving public. Or perhaps that public has shifted to online buying because of much better selection, and the remaining B&M stores are dropping their stock. I will accept your silence as an acknowledgment of correctness. A simple okay as i gave you below would have been appropriate. The major technological changes that relate to LP in the last year or so include: (1) Dance music manipulation devices that don't need a vinyl LP to operate. Okay (2) More and more people seem to be digitizing LPs. Your basis for statement #2? Since I used the word seem, this could be nothing more than a perception of mine. However there is a factual basis for this - the frequency of questions about digitzing vinyl posted and Usenet, the profusion of web pages about it, the number of products that facilitate it, conversations with people in real life, etc. I "seem" to recall that you had a go-to-pieces over this kind of reasoning when it came to Scotts assertion that the market for Audiophile LP's and good turntables was in its best shape in years. I can see where #1 might have relevance to LP sales (but not SACD or DVD-A). Good. What relevance does #2 have to sales of anything (other than electronics)? It's quite a bit easier to exchange digital copies of LPs than copy them by other means... A pretty big stretch, Arny, as a reason for a decline in LP sales. Far thinner than *I* would ever want to claim as *my* logic, especially since its shakiness stands on the shoulders of an already shaky assumption (see five paragraphs above). |
#28
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 12, 2:10 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject... Since you have that memory problem Jenn... Again Jenn avoids relevant facts... Distortion of facts by means of out-of-context quotes noted... Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Jenn dismisses questions that she doesn't want to answer in order to avoid accountability for her actions. I have listed your contributions above to this thread, Mr. Krueger, to reveal the inherent nastiness in your dealings with Jenn. Are you trying to drive yet another r.a.o. poster away? Take a chill pill, please. Since I've contributed far more to this thread than the very selective quotes that you have made John, it is quite clear that your intents are highly deceptive. I don't have the time to waste much more effort with yet another liar. |
#29
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" said: On Feb 12, 2:10 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject... Since you have that memory problem Jenn... Again Jenn avoids relevant facts... Distortion of facts by means of out-of-context quotes noted... Now Jenn tries to raise the ante of proof from her not-yet-admitted ignorance of relevant facts to "solid evidence". Now Jenn expands college age range to 10-24. Has she no shame? Jenn dismisses questions that she doesn't want to answer in order to avoid accountability for her actions. I have listed your contributions above to this thread, Mr. Krueger, to reveal the inherent nastiness in your dealings with Jenn. Are you trying to drive yet another r.a.o. poster away? Take a chill pill, please. Arny has an irrational fear of women, and Jenn in particular. Lies and lies. But keep up the good work, Sander. |
#30
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![]() "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message . com ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. No Arny, I'm not changing the subject. I'm simply recalling, to the best of my ability, Harry's point. Since you have that memory problem Jenn, Harry has be known to say things like: "SACD sales ... have been growing rapidly by all accounts. ... " "In the first half, DVD-Audio sales were up..." "... combined unit sales will catch up with and equal CD sales." "...SACD takes hold, we probably ill NOT be having this debate five years in the future. ... " If you are going to quote me Arny, please have the decency to provide a citation....so that I and others can see them in context. And for that matter, to confirm that I EVER said combined unit sales of anything was going to catch up and equal CD sales. You sure you are not just making all this up...if you fail to provide quotes then I will have to assume you are? I've provided enough text to google up each post almost instantly, Harry. Thanks for not taking responsibility for what are clearly your posts. That way I don't have to answer your additional obfuscations. |
#31
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Sander deWaal said to the Krooborg: Troll ignored. Cue Turdy's exultant "debating trade" poop-dance.... -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#32
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Harry Lavo" wrote in message . .. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Harry Lavo" wrote in message . .. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. And you conclude from this.....what? It looks very much like those well-known emperor's clothes labelled DVD-A, SACD and vinyl have been found out by more and more of the music-loving public. Or perhaps that public has shifted to online buying because of much better selection, and the remaining B&M stores are dropping their stock. I will accept your silence as an acknowledgment of correctness. A simple okay as i gave you below would have been appropriate. The major technological changes that relate to LP in the last year or so include: (1) Dance music manipulation devices that don't need a vinyl LP to operate. Okay (2) More and more people seem to be digitizing LPs. Your basis for statement #2? Since I used the word seem, this could be nothing more than a perception of mine. However there is a factual basis for this - the frequency of questions about digitzing vinyl posted and Usenet, the profusion of web pages about it, the number of products that facilitate it, conversations with people in real life, etc. I "seem" to recall that you had a go-to-pieces over this kind of reasoning when it came to Scotts assertion that the market for Audiophile LP's and good turntables was in its best shape in years. Just idle speculation on Harry's part. Not even a few words quoted. I can see where #1 might have relevance to LP sales (but not SACD or DVD-A). Good. What relevance does #2 have to sales of anything (other than electronics)? It's quite a bit easier to exchange digital copies of LPs than copy them by other means... A pretty big stretch, Arny, as a reason for a decline in LP sales. Far thinner than *I* would ever want to claim as *my* logic, especially since its shakiness stands on the shoulders of an already shaky assumption (see five paragraphs above). Yup Harry, dismiss what you can't answer. |
#33
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![]() "MiNe 109" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. I wonder if the dearth of new major label releases has anything to do with it. Huh? Wasn;t Sander just regaling us with all of the new hi rez releases? The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. As it always has, just as high quality cassettes outsold lps in the eighties. There has never been a "high quality cassette" in the history of man. They've categorically sounded even worse than LPs. |
#34
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On Feb 12, 10:52 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" said: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. In your glee Sue me for being in favor of logic and reason, and against empty claims. to report the demise of "Hi-rez" and vinyl, you're overlooking the fact that less music overall is sold. Yeah, total sales of music overall are have *fallen* to the point where "Total Digital And Physical" sales are *up* almost 30%. Impossible to tell. Complete album sales are down. Digital downloads of singles and ring tones are way up. Do these mixed units equate to more music being sold? Who can tell. Bottom line the dollars are declining. LOL! Hint to anybody who wants to see Sander's latest lies laid bare - read the numbers on the bottom line of the cited reference, looking hard for the number 29.9. Equating ring tones and singles to albums may work for you, but it doesn't work for me. ScottW |
#35
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![]() Sander deWaal said: I have listed your contributions above to this thread, Mr. Krueger, to reveal the inherent nastiness in your dealings with Jenn. Are you trying to drive yet another r.a.o. poster away? Take a chill pill, please. Arny has an irrational fear of women, Yes, we've all seen a mountain of evidence that supports that opinion. and Jenn in particular. The more a woman knows about anything, the more Krooger fears her. Jenn knows a lot about music, orders of magnitude more than Turdy does. The other female posters in the past (Jennifer from Atlanta and Leslie from New York are the two I remember) didn't have nearly such a debilitating effect on the Krooborg. They weren't professional musicians, though. When she announced her return to RAO, dark clouds accumulated in the Michigan skies. And the Lord sent blizzards upon Grosse Pointe, and Arny quivered in fear, and there was wailing and the gnashing of teeth. Could be, could be. Or those grotesque sounds might be something more readily associated with Arnii Krooborg. ;-) -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#36
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![]() The Big Bad Krooborg strokes his self-pity organ. I don't have the time to waste much more effort with yet another liar. Filled your recruiting quota for February already, Arnii? ;-) -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#37
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"Arny Krueger" said:
Lies and lies. But keep up the good work, Sander. Troll ignored. -- - Maggies are an addiction for life. - |
#38
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message news ![]() "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message . com ... In article , Eeyore wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. Contrast this with Harry's hype about booming sales of Hi-Rez formats. IIRC, Harry's point was concerning number of titles available. Typical Jenn - she tries to change the subject. No Arny, I'm not changing the subject. I'm simply recalling, to the best of my ability, Harry's point. Since you have that memory problem Jenn, Harry has be known to say things like: "SACD sales ... have been growing rapidly by all accounts. ... " "In the first half, DVD-Audio sales were up..." "... combined unit sales will catch up with and equal CD sales." "...SACD takes hold, we probably ill NOT be having this debate five years in the future. ... " If you are going to quote me Arny, please have the decency to provide a citation....so that I and others can see them in context. And for that matter, to confirm that I EVER said combined unit sales of anything was going to catch up and equal CD sales. You sure you are not just making all this up...if you fail to provide quotes then I will have to assume you are? I've provided enough text to google up each post almost instantly, Harry. Thanks for not taking responsibility for what are clearly your posts. That way I don't have to answer your additional obfuscations. Lack of courtesy, honesty, and integrity noted for all to contemplate, Arny. |
#39
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![]() Harry Lavo said: Thanks for not taking responsibility for what are clearly your posts. That way I don't have to answer your additional obfuscations. Lack of courtesy, honesty, and integrity noted for all to contemplate, Arny. Thank Harrrry for, admitting Harrey that you have no debating trade chops, in the snow Hareye. -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#40
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: "MiNe 109" wrote in message ... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: Most recent RIAA figures show that there has been a significant drop in retail sales of all physical formats: http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf SACD down by 44.6% DVD-A down by 35.1% Vinyl down by 32.3% CD was down by 14.3% Note that the list of biggest losers was led by SACD, DVD-A and then vinyl. I wonder if the dearth of new major label releases has anything to do with it. Huh? Wasn;t Sander just regaling us with all of the new hi rez releases? Most often found on specialty labels, not majors. You'd think Sony wouldn't sell anything but hybrid SACDs. Go figure. The traditional CD format, which amounted for about 99% of all sales, outperformed the rest. As it always has, just as high quality cassettes outsold lps in the eighties. There has never been a "high quality cassette" in the history of man. They've categorically sounded even worse than LPs. My bad. Change to "just as the inferior cassette outsold lps in the eighties." Stephen |