In a way, those people who write books, and make art (hard-to-make-ends-meet creative jobs, sometimes involving selling your dreams..) are very lucky.
People may read, or look at art on their computers, but it doesn't stop them wanting a magazine for their train journey, or to hang art on their walls at home.
Perfume, hair, food..all mediums offering creative work that people still need for physically, tangible products. But music?
Essence, mood, captured, for you.
Music is ESSENTIAL to enhance so many of these other elements; hair salons, fashion shows, high street retailers, soft candlelit dinner.. So much art & written word is inspired and indeed created while listening to music. Yet music is being overlooked. Cheapened.
Film has also suffered, but if you're watching a film you downloaded for free, those actors and actresses are going to remind you that real people made this movie happen, and you have not made your contribution to it. Music stays in some far reaching place in your mind, in your soul.
My EP.
I bought my music equipment from scratch to record. I didn't just write songs. I wrote, performed, produced, recorded, engineered, edited and promoted them, I sought other people to make their musical contributions in performance, I took time, spent money, made effort, many late nights staring at a computer screen, and though I am very glad I did it, should I have to sell these songs through an online company for 50p?
Let me say again, music is ESSENTIAL to so many other jobs, not just creative jobs, people in factories, long haul drivers, the health industry, it's therapeutic uses are widely recognised and of course it helps keep millions of bars, venues and night clubs in business, every day and night of the week.
"The fashion industry hijacked the Oscars" I heard someone say the other day. True. (And they have their hands in music's pockets too).
But now the musicians, are expected to make money from the clothing sold at gigs, from the cult of personality ("celebrity") that makes you want to attend our shows, be associated with us, and all of the merchandise that represents us.
Except the actual music.
The music now lives in your computer, in your ipod, in your HEAD.
It's true and fair to say, we do all all like to share creative ideas; books, films, clothes, music.
But it's not the labels killing the music industry.
It's you.
PS I may or may not make my music available digitally, and while I do believe in a non-eco friendly-let's-buy-the-physical-album approach to music in general, I affirm that people should be free to purchase music as a download.
I think it's great (and very "convenient") but the value of music is being lost, and while people would like to argue that labels have driven the price of music into the ground whilst focussing on artists hair, apparel, and interview skills, I think that only we, the people, can decide how much a song means to us, how much we really value music, and I know that my friends and I truly do, and my music, is worth much more than 50p, I thank you.