Welcome to Baggas.com - Paul's blog on life, medicine, faith, family, technology and much more...
For all my networking and media pages in one place, check out my NetVibes Page.
18th April 2008

Music as Furniture

Tags : , , ,

Categories : Internet, Links, Personal, iPod, music |

A bittersweet look at ten years of MP3s

Excellent article here looking back on ten years since the first MP3 players were produced. The author mentions some of the good things about digital music, but also some of the things he misses such as borrowing and lending music, shopping for used music, album liner notes and artwork, and (my favourite) music as furniture.

I can relate to many of his points. I jumped on the MP3 bandwagon fairly early, using my dialup connection in the heyday of Napster to download hundreds of tracks. It was slow but fun in a way, and challenging -like trying to find that elusive final song you were missing from an album, or the rare album that few people had. And although it was anonymous there was still the pleasure of finding a user with similar music tastes and a huge collection of songs – even better if they had a fast internet connection to leech from. And there was the built in chat box that added at least a little bit of human interaction into the process. None of the P2P software I’ve used since has been quite the same, although I did use one called DC++ a few years back that came close. But by then we had broadband, which took some of that challenge out of the whole thing and gave us the ability to flood our hard drives with vast quantities of files that we were unlikely to ever seriously listen to. And after a while the whole downloading thing just lost it’s shine. Now we have bit-torrent which is easy and fast, but no fun.

Going back to the points in the article above I guess I’ve come the full circle as well. I now purchase more CDs than I ever have before. Admittedly it’s partly because I have more income than before, but it’s also because I like to have the CDs in my hand, reading the notes, looking to see what track is coming up next, and sitting on my shelf as a reminder of what I have and what I like, instead of being tucked away on a hard drive. I totally get the whole “music as furniture” appeal – a bit chunk of the wall in the room I’m sitting in is full of CDs (as you can see in the photo, taken from the couch I’m sitting on with my iSight camera). A related concept is the “books as furniture” one – few things make a room or house more inviting and appealing than shelves and shelves of books. If you’ve been to my house you’ll know I’m definitely a big adherent to this.

I love my iPod and having a collection of digital music at my fingertips, but it’s still just not the same as having something physical to hold, to collect, and to enjoy as part of the overall experience of the music. I’ve bought a few albums over iTunes but probably at least half of those I’ve then gone on to purchase the physical CD. Nowadays I don’t bother as much with the iTunes store unless I’m in a real hurry to get something or if I just want an individual track for some reason (like this Reindeer song I sang at our Christmas carols event last year). I did get one album on iTunes last month – Luka Bloom’s Before Sleep Comes (which is a brilliant mellow acoustic album) but I liked it so much I’ll definitely be getting the CD. I rarely acquire music now by less legitimate means, but even then it will usually now lead to a purchase. For example I’ve had the O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack languishing on my hard drive for years (I think I actually got it when I traded some MP3 CDs with a friend rather than downloading it myself) – never listened to it until a month or so ago, and when I finally did I immediately went out and bought the CD at the next opportunity.

So from my perspective at least the music industry need not fear the death of the CD just yet. For all it’s benefits digital music is still just not quite the same.

There are currently 5 responses to “Music as Furniture”

Why not let us know what you think by adding your own comment! Your opinion is as valid as anyone elses, so come on... let us know what you think.

  1. 1 On April 20th, 2008, Steve said:

    Speaking of DC++….That’s what my ISP !!DISTRIBUTES!! to everyone on their network, and we have a free unlimited intranet within Zelenograd. Super hot on a 100mbit connection… :-)

  2. 2 On April 20th, 2008, baggas said:

    Cool. Actually I remember connecting to some Ukranian and Hungarian DC++ networks back in the day. Eastern Europe seemed to be a hotbed for P2P sharing. As usual Australia seems to be far behind much of the world in broadband speeds.

  3. 3 On April 21st, 2008, Steve said:

    Yeah, it’s still really popular up this neck of the woods. Many Hungarian hubs goin down. Russia has had a few scapegoats recently in regards to the legality of it all. Some random poor high school teacher in a remote town was put in jail for having an illegal copy of XP installed on some school computers. Ridiculous considering I know a number of people personally who have also, and it’s very easy to find a cracked copy here. It’s really terrible, but the government have said they are cracking down on illegal software, and so they wanted to show they were doing someting about it. Although, I guess all of this is a completely different kettle of fish I do not wish to smell, let alone open… :-)
    I’m sure you appreciate how I both opened and closed that paragrah with idioms… I’m an English teacher now, it’s what I do! :-P In regards to speeds, I don’t get to connect to the net at that speed, but I do have a pretty good selection of speeds. The lowest is about 2.5Mbps up till 10mbps. I pay about $25 per month for 5mbps :-D

  4. 4 On April 27th, 2008, Tips for travelling readers » Baggas’ Blog said:

    [...] for saving luggage space but for me this idea has one huge drawback – it violates my whole “books as furniture” principle – just like I prefer a physical copy of my music rather than a purely digital one, [...]

  5. 5 On May 5th, 2008, iTunes usage » Baggas’ Blog said:

    [...] wouldn’t know where to find music on the undernet if they wanted to. As I commented in another post, I rarely buy stuff from the iTunes store, but I do still buy a lot of CDs, which I always [...]

Leave a Reply