James Steele wrote:From what was in the original post it implied that his lossless format stuff was FREE too.
My last post about the tiered pricing referred to his previous album,
Ghosts I-IV – you are correct that his new album
The Slip is being released totally free in a lossless & DRM-free format (in fact, with an option for 24/96 WAVE files).
James Steele wrote:Hey, even though I might think that Trent's stuff is dark and bizarre and whether it's simply a gimmick or creating truly disturbing and psychologically warped videos is really his thing... I will give him his due as cutting edge and setting the trends.
I actually come from the same rust-belt cornfield county in western Pennsylvania that Trent hails from, and I can say that the darkness in his stuff is not without merit ;)
James Steele wrote:But to be honest, what pisses me off about guys like Trent who have already made their fortune, is they have absolutely no concern for the indy artist (people they once were) who are trying to convince someone to kick out a few bucks for their CD or a download.
It's hard for anyone but Trent Reznor to say what his real motivation is, but I think that what he's doing, rather than making things harder for indie artists, actually proves that you can exist outside of the mainstream successfully. If you're an independent musician and are in-the-know with today's technology (digital delivery, et. al), it shows that, while you won't have the momentum that someone like Trent Reznor does, you don't necessarily need the Big Four labels to produce, distribute, and market your music.
James Steele wrote:"Trent Reznor's album is free... why should I buy yours?"
Well ... point taken. I'd like to say that more people would see through that sort of logic, but I'm not so sure I give Joe Q. Consumer that much credit.
James Steele wrote:I'm supposed work past that... but when big names give their music away, they do it because they have figured out a way it will benefit them (if nothing else, getting their name back in wide circulation), and they could give a rat's ass if it screws lesser known artists.
I think an important detail, for both
Ghosts I-IV and
The Slip, is that the songs (and their accompanying multi-tracks) are creative commons licensed to facilitate new creations. Sure, it gets his name out there (the CC license he picked is a non-commercial, attribution, share-alike license), but it gives a lot of people an interesting way to interact, contribute, create something new, or just really dig into the sounds on a new level. The value of that is not to be left out of the pitcure, I think.