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Posted on 03.18.08 by hardrockchick @ 9:56 pm
Ummm…hellloooo?!?!?!? Where’s my poster? I’m paying more for tickets, dammit. Imagine my surprise when, a few weeks into living here, I go to The Fillmore, and on the way out they give me a poster. Then I remember all of this great poster art that I have seen over the years coming from The Fillmore, Warfield, and Winterland, never realizing that it was free. And then they kept giving and giving and now they take it away. That’s it- the absence of my free posters signals that the economy is definitely in trouble. Filed under: Rock Rants Comments: None |
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Posted on 02.05.08 by hardrockchick @ 8:19 am
Filed under: Rock Rants Comments: None |
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Posted on 01.14.08 by hardrockchick @ 10:35 pm
Yeah, I paid the $5 for Saul William’s album, Niggy Tardust. I steal 90% of my music- but for this, I paid. Why? Because in today’s music market, I am in charge. I take some things for free: old, classic albums that were made by artists who the record buying populous turned into millionaires ages ago. I take new albums that I’m ‘trying out’. How do I justify my thievery? For one, I write this blog for free. But more importantly than that, if I like you, I will buy your concert ticket. And those are not cheap. I will also buy albums from local artists in person- I know for sure there is no middle man there. And my last category- I’ll support those who are taking risks. Saul William’s album release was a risk- Radiohead’s was not. People will buy anything from Radiohead- their cult status has afforded them these leniencies. In Rainbows was seriously not that good. Saul William’s, while being second to the take-or-pay buying scenario, serves as a more relatable example for the other artists who might potentially use this model. Will this model work? I think it has a chance. $5 seems to be the magic number to successfully get people to bite. Allow me to make a random analogy to explain what I believe will be the timeline for this situation. Once upon a time, families ate home cooked meals made from scratch. Then, the fifties came along, and all of this low quality crap called TV dinners, instant this and that, and fast food popped up, and people loved them because it was all convenient and cheap. Then, somewhere in the seventies and eighties, we realized that all of that stuff wasn’t that great for you, and it really didn’t taste very good anyway. And now we have organic, natural foods. The end. What does this have to do with music? Right now, we are in that middle phase- the fast food phase. Once people get over the high of having free music at their fingertips, they’ll start realizing that the quality of their music is crap. And then, they’ll reexamine their options. Hopefully, it won’t take 4 decades. Unfortunately, when talking about all of this, TR uttered the 4 letter word- tax- in his interview. People will definitely pay $5 per album before they allow for any kind of tax, even if the math doesn’t make sense. That’s how much they hate taxes. In the meantime, while all of this figures itself out, consumers will keep stealing their music, but buy more concert tickets than ever; new musicians will continue to starve, while the established musicians will continue to freak out about their livelihood; and record companies will shrivel up like a witch in water. But that’s just my two cents. Filed under: Nine Inch Nails and Rock Rants Comments: 1 Comment |
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Posted on 11.18.07 by hardrockchick @ 3:33 pm
It was a life long dream of mine to write for Rolling Stone. I was really psyched when a little piece of mine was a finalist in one of their contests (and MySpace is doing a music tour, BTW). But the Rolling Stone Rock Daily blog keeps hijacking my stories. Here is a list of items I reported on first, and then they mysteriously showed up on the Rock Daily later. ->Best Musicians in Movies: my version. Their version. 2 in common- Bowie and Love, mine debuted 4 months earlier. You get the point. OK RS, either start paying me or stop stealing my shit. Filed under: Rock Rants Comments: 1 Comment |
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Posted on 07.21.07 by hardrockchick @ 10:41 am
Going into a record store for this first time in my life was a defining moment for me. It was the mid to late eighties, and I was barely tall enough to peruse the racks of 45s, cassette tapes, and 8 tracks. I think I came away with 2 45s that day to take home and play on my Disney record player: Madonna’s Papa Don’t Preach and Hank William’s Jr.’s Tear in my Beer. It was a strange childhood, I know. Fast forward to 1989, when my music catalog was a bit broader, and I had my tape collection: more Madonna, Depeche Mode, Young MC, and Michael Jackson. I’d take the inserts out of the cassette cases and learn every word printed in there. I’d hit stop and rewind to keep experiencing my favorite parts. And sometimes, the tape would get eaten. Now it’s 1991. I have my first CD player, and I can vividly remember my first trip to buy CDs. My dad took me to Blockbuster Music, and after an extensive, wide eyed examination of every slot in the one row of CDs that were available at that time, I came away with: The Beatles’ Sargent Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band, a Johann Sebastian Bach collective, and Guns ‘N Roses Use Your Illusion I. As written before, those CD longboxes were a powerful piece of marketing material for me-little pieces of art. Those longboxes didn’t last very long. Then, for 10 years, we lived happily in CD land. Sure, we bitched about prices, scratched CDs, and the like. But we bought more and more of them, having extensive shelves to hold all of their cases in a prominent place in our homes next to our TVs. I, like many of my friends, had a souped up sound system in my car where from age 15-24 I shared with any car in close proximity exactly what CD I was listening to. Boom boom. In 2002 or so, things changed. I remember going to a college party and hearing someone playing a burned mixed CD, and I remember that my gut reaction was, this is going to change things. First it was just that one friend in your group bought a CD and then made copies for everyone. Then, it was downloading songs and making mixed CDs. I can remember the first time I did it, downloading random, old songs that I would never shell out the money to buy the whole CD for. And when I put it in my car for the first time- what was initially excitement in hearing a song from my past was drowned out by horrible sound quality, cut off songs, weird high pitched noises, even skipping. Not the kind of thing you want to play loud. Granted, downloading music has improved over the years, particularly if you do it legally. But I still can’t help but wonder if we’re just getting used to a diminished experience. Sure- it’s cheaper, you get only the songs you want, and it’s instant gratification. But what about seeing the album art and that rounding out your music experience of the album? Or reading the liner notes? Or having a full album and hearing tracks you wouldn’t have know about otherwise? Or going to the record store, and getting a great recommendation? I can only talk about this debate in the context of my own personal experience, and what I feel like I’m missing out on. Many are chiming in on chastising the record industry for not coming up with a solution to stealing music. It’s not an easy problem to fix. What would make you go back to paying for music when you’ve been getting it for free? Filed under: Rock Rants Comments: 1 Comment |
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Posted on 05.21.07 by hardrockchick @ 12:20 pm
1. Service Charges, aka IN-convenience charges. Yay, I’m going to see the Smashing Pumpkins for $25!!! Deal. Wait…2 tickets and the total is $78??? WTF??? Ticketmaster Service Charge “explanation” from ticketmaster.com:
So, ‘ticketbastard’ alone is not at hand in screwing you. Let’s continue with this Smashing Pumpkins example. Shows are announced, price is $25. It’s a special kind of show, and the price seems reasonable. Tickets are ONLY available online. Come 10am on Sunday: hungover potential attendees constantly refreshing their pages until the lucky ones get through. That 3 minute time bomb clock allows us a small amount of time to determine whether or not we want to buy these tickets once we discover the outrageous service charges. More than likely, people just bought them, cursed ticketmaster, and went back to bed. The situation might have been a bit different if tickets were $40 with a smaller service fee. See what I’m saying? It’s a bit bait and switch-y. And, by the way, getting a free 99 cent itunes song with each ticket purchase does not ease the pain. 2. Scalpers. I always shudder when I pass the homeless looking scalper crowd on my way to a show, spying some young, naive thing peeling money off her stack to buy an eticket. A) never let the scalper see how much money you have. B) never buy an eticket from a scalper unless you’ve walked up to the ticket taker to make sure it is real first. Moving on, scalpers ruin the concert experience for many people. They take the space that could have belonged to an ecstatic fan who knows all the songs, and replace them with some schmuck with money who’s trying to impress someone. Not as fun to party with. There are many ways to defeat scalpers that are just not being implemented often enough. Nine Inch Nails offers 10% of the venue’s tickets to their fan club first, which, in the case of seated shows, allows for the ans to be up close. Now, I do not mean a stupid presale password. A fan club resale password is like still using dial up- it doesn’t work anymore. It gets sold on ebay and scalpers get their hands on it and then you’re done. I’m talking their own private ticket sale. Another method that mostly works is forcing tickets to be kept at will call, with a small ticket purchase limit (often just 2 tickets). The credit card used to purchase must be there to pick it up. If I’m forced to buy from a scalper, I buy on ebay only. I can make sure that the seller is highly reviewed, and I can tell if they are a big operation or someone who actually just bought extra tickets that didn’t get used. 3. Misinformation. We pay damn good money to go to shows. So , I take issue with the fact that for the money that I am pating, the only information that I get in return usually is that I am going to see _______ headliner at _________ venue. Often, but not always, there’s a clear expression of when doors open and when the show is supposed to start, and who the opener is. We almost always do not get a schedule that tells us any more details, such as an estimated time the main act will come on. Many shows I go to do not well publicize any additional preliminary openers, and what that means for the schedule. It’d be nice to know. 4. E-tickets: Saves the ticket company’s money, facilitates the scalpers, and leaves no worthwhile piece of memorabilia. I hate e-tickets!!! At least make them look cute or something??? 5. Frequent Shopper Programs, anyone? The constant consolidation of venues, promoters, and ticket companies have made or live music experience a ticketmaster, clearchannel, and verizon world. Can you cut me a break somewhere? Please, start some sort of frequency program for all of us that spend all of our extra bucks on your tickets. A little $10 gift certificate for every $200 I spend? A special offer- like a real one- not some $1000 Christina Aguilera ‘meet and greet’. Filed under: Rock Rants and Top 5 Comments: None |
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Posted on 05.10.07 by hardrockchick @ 9:03 pm
Due to my recent camera incident at Velvet Revolver, I’ve decided to do a new column entitles ‘Rock Rants’. Begin rant. With the current state of the music industry, should we really be punished for taking pictures at concerts? It’s not like we sell them and they’re missing out on a profit. I can understand them not wanting people who are recording bootlegs and selling them- though I think they’re mostly shared for free. People like me post pictures and sometimes short videos on blogs which help create publicity for bands. I write lots of reviews for live shows, which hopefully influences people to buy tickets to said shows, and merchandise, and so on…which is where bands make their money now. Is it the flash? I think not. I see at least one cup get hurled onto a stage at every show I go to. And a flash is going to ruin Slash’s guitar solo? By the way, everyone with cell phones is taking pictures, and this is allowed. Explanation, please? AND, this is San Francisco. You can’t smoke indoors anywhere, but you can smoke pot everywhere. And you’re worried about my camera? How about my lungs? You gonna pay for my chemo in twenty years when I get cancer? Why don’t you bust that guy smoking a joint and blowing it in my hair that I will now have to go home and wash, and spare me my pictures. User created content is single handedly propelling the music industry forward today. Where did I find out about the last bands I discovered? Hype Machine, which aggregates blogs where people post mp3s of music. How do I decide what shows to go to? I watch youtube videos from shows that came from someone’s shitty camera, and read other blogger’s posts. Record company promotional efforts aren’t really reaching me anymore. I don’t know who makes the decision on these camera rules, the artist, the venue, the record company. But some bands have embraced it and it really works for them. AoA has continuous youtube contests where you can win prizes. So has Slayer. Does this mean I will not go to shows that don’t allow cameras? No. I’ve had my camera threatened to be taken away at a NIN show before, too. Fear of death couldn’t keep me from a NIN show. I’m just going to use my little forum here to get this off my chest. It’s an annoyance. End rant. Filed under: Rock Rants Comments: 2 Comments |









