Anyone else have this problem with music?

Recommended Videos

Blue_vision

Elite Member
Mar 31, 2009
1,276
0
41
Aby_Z said:
No, I try to get everything I can from an artist I like.
This. Just because a lot of artists have tonnes of good work, that's just worth buying the album. I sample the top hits, then a couple random songs from the album, and if I like it will consider buying it. When I get a new album, it usually takes me a week or two to crack into it, and then I listen to pretty much every song on it regularly.
 

Grimsinger

New member
Apr 9, 2008
93
0
0
To me, the albums are put in an order for a reason. In that, the song before effects how you hear the song after. so yeah, i only buy complete albums.
 

vxicepickxv

Slayer of Bothan Spies
Sep 28, 2008
3,126
0
0
I'm a mix and match kind of guy when it comes to iTunes. If I can get an album cheaper buy buying it whole, I buy the CD. If I can get it cheaper via iTunes, I'll buy it on iTunes.

Example Album - How Could Hell Be any worse(Bad Religion)
New - $10.00
iTunes album cost - $10.00
Songs on album - 28
iTunes cost/song - $1.29

Why would I NOT buy the album?
 

TeeBs

New member
Oct 9, 2010
1,563
0
0
Albums for the most part, sometimes I download single songs when I first find out about a band, decide if they are worth it and sometimes im pretty anal about owning a entire discography.

Case and point, despite better judgement, I know the new Sonic Youth CDs are shit, I know I will never listen to that shit, I know none of there CDs will ever be anywhere near as good as Daydream Nation, but I fucking needed them.
 

Gildan Bladeborn

New member
Aug 11, 2009
3,042
0
0
Not even remotely - I do have a few isolated 'lone tracks' from a few artists, but I'm very much a "get the whole bloody album" kind of guy (of which I have enough now to leave my music playing for 28.7 days without a track repeating, whee!). It helps that in general the bands that I seek out don't release albums with one or two decent tracks and the rest padded out with filler, because they're usually not anywhere near popular enough to get away with moves like that, heh.

Also just having one or two isolated tracks seems... sloppy to me, and I'm touchy about things like that.
 

Dango

New member
Feb 11, 2010
21,063
0
0
This is usually my case, but that's only because I stick to foreign music most of the time. There are some artists that I have 5 or 6 songs of, but most of the time I just have one or two of an artists songs.

EDIT: Ironically I just bought 8 Machinae Supremacy songs.
 

ensouls

New member
Feb 1, 2010
140
0
0
I'm largely the same way. Some of my favourite songs on my list are lone songs by bands I otherwise don't care for. There are about 20 bands who continuously make music I like, or at least albums I can listen to all of the way through, and then there's the CDs that people give me or that I buy just to support the artist. Just picky I suppose.
 

ReservoirAngel

New member
Nov 6, 2010
3,779
0
0
Sober Thal said:
So you only buy a song at a time from itunes? Or do you pirate a few songs at a time? Or both perhaps?

You must be a young human, maybe 16 at most, right?

You are different...that is being mild. Do you think what you do is the norm?
I get a full album, then just delete the songs from it that I don't like. Normally this ends up being pretty much half the album at least.

I'm actually 19, and I don't think it's the norm. I think I'm weird for having a pick-and-mix iTunes library.
 

Togs

New member
Dec 8, 2010
1,468
0
0
Another album buyer here, if I here a song I like I buy the albums to see if the rest of the bands songs are of the same quality.

One of my favourite things about an album is that its an experience that evolves- on a 1st listen theres the 2 or 3 stand out tracks whilst the others blend into one another or dont sound that good, but on the 2nd this changes- the ones that sounded good at 1st now sound boring and musically dull while that odd little one towards the end suddenly becomes this massive epic tune and your shocked at how you didnt realise how fantastic it was 1st time round, and then on the 3rd and fourth and so on it keeps changing.

In my expereince when I tend to download single songs its the ones that sound good on a 1st listen, the ones that get boring quickly and as since I dont have the full album to listen to I get bored of the band and miss out on the awesome tracks that take a few listens to properly enjoy.

So after that sanctimonious wall of text, in my not-so-humble opinion OP your doing yourself a disservice but skipping out on the full experience that a band can offer, and its worth remembering that the best songs take time.

EDIT= Also, am I alone in despising Itunes? Id much rather have a real tactile copy of the CD in my hands
 

Polaris19

New member
Aug 12, 2010
995
0
0
Not really a problem. Just the way music has changed and evolved over time. People don't see much point in buying a full album when they can just pick and chose the songs they want through iTunes or other such services.

It's a bit of a shame, especially for some albums that are meant to be listened in their entirety, but it is understandable.
 

Ken Sapp

Cat Herder
Apr 1, 2010
510
0
0
ReservoirAngel said:
My friends have recently commented on my apparently insane music collection.

Not so much the music itself, but I'll try to explain: throughout my entire time listening to music, I have NEVER actually listened to or even HAD one full album.

My iTunes consists almost entirely of random artists with only 1 or 2 songs under their names. I never like the vast majority of songs a certain band/artist produces, it's always just a song here, a song there.

So does anyone else have this habit, or is it just me being a total freak?
Who says it is insane? Most of an album has been crap filler with 1-3 maybe even five good tracks for at least twenty years. Any band that ends up on a major label has to push out CDs at an unrealistic rate so end up having to record alot of throwaway tracks.
 

GiantRaven

New member
Dec 5, 2010
2,422
0
0
Ken Sapp said:
Who says it is insane? Most of an album has been crap filler with 1-3 maybe even five good tracks for at least twenty years. Any band that ends up on a major label has to push out CDs at an unrealistic rate so end up having to record alot of throwaway tracks.
Care to give out a wealth of examples that substantiate your claims because I'm just not seeing it.
 

Ken Sapp

Cat Herder
Apr 1, 2010
510
0
0
GiantRaven said:
Ken Sapp said:
Who says it is insane? Most of an album has been crap filler with 1-3 maybe even five good tracks for at least twenty years. Any band that ends up on a major label has to push out CDs at an unrealistic rate so end up having to record alot of throwaway tracks.
Care to give out a wealth of examples that substantiate your claims because I'm just not seeing it.
No I don't as I am not here to change your opinion.
 

GiantRaven

New member
Dec 5, 2010
2,422
0
0
Ken Sapp said:
No I don't as I am not here to change your opinion.
Then your claims go unsubstantiated and what you say can be disregarded entirely because you can't back up what you're saying.
 

tigermilk

New member
Sep 4, 2010
951
0
0
Nope, back in the late 90's and early 00's my 1200 or so albums were all on CD. I have often wondered though about how a whole generation of people will consume music in the fragmented fashion the OP mentions.
 

Jezzascmezza

New member
Aug 18, 2009
2,498
0
0
No, you pretty much do what I do.
By picking out one or two songs from different artists, you can get quite a nice range of music.
 

darkonnis

New member
Apr 8, 2010
201
0
0
Even if there's only the odd song or two i like, i often get the whole album. Nothing annoys me more when i have friends over and someone says, oh you have "insert band here" have you got "song" its on the same album, only to find i dont have it. It does no harm just sitting there, so i dont mind i having it. I have also found that after i over play a song to death the rest of the album starts growing on me, not right a way but a few months down the line.
Its annoying looking at someones music collection only to find its the odd song or two, with my friends its often the indie-pop crap ones.
 

Ken Sapp

Cat Herder
Apr 1, 2010
510
0
0
GiantRaven said:
Ken Sapp said:
No I don't as I am not here to change your opinion.
Then your claims go unsubstantiated and what you say can be disregarded entirely because you can't back up what you're saying.
Considering judgements of value are completely subjective any arguments relating to the quality of particular songs or albums are essentially a wast of time. I have my opinions and you have yours.

On the point I made of bands being expected to push out albums at an unrealistic rate, artistic endeavors can not be forced to conform to a timetable however when a new artist signs on with a record label the contract has a time table saying they will produce X number of albums in X amount of time. New artists do not generally have the clout to be able to change much in contract negotiation. Since they are bound by contract to get that next album out or lose their contract they will often have to include material which is either not finished to their satisfaction or use songs written by label songwriters they may have never met which will result in music which doesn't feel the same because it wasn't written by the same people.