Derek Holzer on Mon, 18 Mar 2002 16:24:25 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> Where Music Will Be Coming From - Kevin Kelly |
A quite compelling response to this article showed up on the [microsound] list, from Joshua Maremont. 'scuse my monoculture :) best, Derek +++ Date: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 18:25:06 -0800 From: Joshua Maremont <thermal@boxmanstudies.com> To: microsound <microsound@hyperreal.org> Subject: Re: [microsound] Where Music Will Be Coming From An interesting read, yes, but the writer seems to couch his quite valid reflections and predictions in a commercial-consumer model of music which I find limited and backward in its struggle - mirroring that of the MP3 and Napster litigations - to retroactively recontextualize some of the most revolutionary aspects of digital cultural creation and dissemination by way of a strained antique economic model. His analysis is right on the mark until he lemming-trots into a wool-over-eyes future in which the current model of musicians financially enslaved to a centralized system of distribution and patronage is magically metamorphosized into what a marketing consultant would surely name a "net-savvy" version of the same arrangement (see: SDMI and subscription downloads). For me this analysis - like those of the entertainment industry plaintiffs in soft-music legal actions - misses (or deliberately hides) an entirely different future of music in which the laws of musical economics are not simply retooled or upturned (remember the New Economy?) but completely discredited down to the validity of their component terms and concepts. This other future is one in which profit and music are not likely to be mentioned in the same sentence, in which music is made by those who now only buy it, and in which the source of the audio data is less important than the experience of finding and hearing and using it - one in which labels and stars lose their centrality and priority and become mere nodes in a system they no longer control. And organs of the ever more loudly creaking centralized system - like Yahoo or NTY or Wired - cannot be happy to consider such implications of their own irrelevance. I would retitle the article: Where Corporate Music Will Be Bought From. I imagine few here will be shopping at that mall, except for the occasional and covert girl-/boy-band fix. np - "Vertical Forms" compilation -- Joshua Maremont / Thermal - mailto:thermal@boxmanstudies.com Boxman Studies Label - http://www.boxmanstudies.com/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net