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The CD celebrates its 25th anniversary

Yes, kids who are too young to remember vinyl, the format of music you grew up with is celebrating 25 years of domination. But for how much longer can/will the CD dominate? It’s hard to guesstimate, but not hard at all to see that the mp3 format has changed things so significantly as to cause enough damage to the CD as to make it obsolete sooner than later. We now live in an iPod world where it’s all about the instant gratification. Fine by me. If it forces bands and labels to rethink the whole structure, as in makings album not 60-plus minutes long and getting down to the real nitty gritty – great hit singles and less chaff – who am I to argue? Back when vinyl was the standard, it was a big deal to have a double album. When the CD took over, it was odd if you didn’t have more than 15 songs trying to fill every last second of the disc.

If you could take the new business model, and bring back genuine artist development and such and not wait four years between albums so bands can either stagnate or their rabid fans lose interest while cookie cutter bullshit artists are sent out in droves just to capitalize on money that will be lost in the long run, I think the music industry could regain some footing. An honest pricing system wouldn’t hurt either. No one really thinks that $19.99 for a single CD at FYE is a good deal, or that $17.99 is a “sale price.” Oh, and you also have to stop treating the older consumers such as myself like we don’t matter anymore. We’re the ones who are in it for the long haul. The kids being catered to through NOW compilations aren’t the demographic that’s going to mean squat when it comes down to it. And lastly, the RIAA needs to just fucking stop suing everyone as if they really cared about the artists. No one’s ever bought that lie.

Road Warriors 28

Rock band Blue October had what is being called a “successful show” at Lollapalooza (exactly what does that mean at a festival with a captive audience?), and the band has added more tour dates to their upcoming fall run, including shows in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles. For a complete list of dates, check out www.blueoctoberfan.com.

Pop stars The Backstreet Boys are set to release their new album, Inconsolable, on October 30, and plans are tentatively in place for a world tour in 2008, one that would have them in the States next spring or summer.

Farm Aid is set for September 9 on New York’s Randall Island, and this year a special acoustic performance is planned featuring Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews and Gregg Allman. Others scheduled to perform at the annual event are Neil Young, Counting Crows and John Mellencamp.

Arcade Fire is back with their second album, Neon Bible, and has added dates to their fall US tour with LCD Soundsystem. The new dates include Salt Lake City and Seattle, and all confirmed dates so far Continue reading »

You heard it here first: Hard-Fi, “Suburban Knights”

Not to be confused with Muse’s “Knights of Cydonia,” another song I hyped under the “You heard it here first” banner. My boys from Staines are back with their second long-player, and if this song is any indication, this record is gonna be HUGE. At the very least, it will sound huge, and principal songwriter Richard Archer clearly hasn’t forgotten that sometimes the simplest parts of a song are its most enduring. Not sure what I mean? Wait for the backing vocals in the chorus.

Windows Media

Real Audio

Video

The album, Once upon a Time in the West, drops September 18. I, for one, can’t wait.

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