pewgar_seemsimandroid, it probably would be worse if you bought it in the most expensive format
NaoPb, Back in those days you could listen to the record/cassette/cd in the store before you bought it. They would have these headphones you could use.
So it’s not as big of a problem as this meme would make it seem.
sadie_sorceress, The music shop at the mall near me had those headphones but only like 10 albums that were able to demo. And I’m pretty sure the demo was just bits of the songs. I definitely bought plenty of CDs having heard only one track or fewer.
NaoPb, Oh, that sucks. Mine had like some headphones at the counter with a few buttons in the counter itself. And you would just hand the person behind the counter the cd you wanted to listen to and they’d put it in.
But from what I saw on old footage was they just had a line of a few turntables with headphones and you could just listen to the records.
This may have been the mom and pop shops and not the chain shops. Though I don’t know about that.
Getawombatupya, I see puddle of mudd in this and I don’t like it
ademir, you mean the band?
ademir,
ademir, acho que tá tudo bem, provavelmente é sobre a banda.
flango, Ih, não sabia que quando denunciava alguém ia parar na minha instância de origem. Isso é meio ruim c não acha?
ademir, É e não é.
O lado bom é que se o mod de lá for negligente pelo menos daqui a gente consegue remover.
gianmarco, Couldn’t you just get it back to the store and get a refund?
stolid_agnostic, Try $20 of disappointing CD.
lickmysword, Bought reanimation by Linkin park. The mecha album art is better than the remixes imo. Also the larger reason I bought it lol.
corsicanguppy, I bought Finger11 for paralyzed and then realized it was by far their best track.
Jesse, What? That’s their sell-out pop song. The rest of their stuff is way better.
KrupskayaPraxis, That’s why I only buy albums that I listened to before on Spotify.
Glytch, It’s 1999. Why are you paying for music at all? Napster still exists for you.
grahamja, Only about 4% of the worlds population had internet access in 1999.
Dra, Yeah and good luck with the 500mb montly cap!!
Fiivemacs, And the internet was so much better then…the masses of people ruined it
Getawombatupya, (edited ) Alternate take - spend 3 minutes downloading a 3 minute song. Buy the album. The rest of the album blows. You just worked for two hours to pay for it in your minimum wage after school casual job
Ibex0, CDs were up to $16 when I was making less that $10/hr at work. 😢
ackzsel, $10 would get a you a CD where the 3rd track is also the last.
Rehwyn, Yup. I seem to remember most mainstream albums were around $15-20 in the 1990s. Adjusted for inflation, that’d be about $28-37 today.
I_Clean_Here, You listen to it anyway and it grows on you.
dolle, So much this! I don’t use Spotify, I buy all my music on Bandcamp. Sometimes I buy an album after just hearing the first song because I find it interesting, but then after a few more listens I realize that the album is not what I thought it was. However, I’m already committed because I paid for it, and it now sits at the top of my collection, so I continue to listen to it. Sometimes it turns out I find qualities in the music that I didn’t notice at the first listen, and I learn to like it. Sometimes not, and I ditch it.
This was also the way I discovered music before Spotify even existed, I just never changed my habits (I just used other services than Bandcamp back then). I think more people should try turning off the algorithmic entertainment faucet that is Spotify and try committing a bit more to the music that they listen to. Also, a lot more money goes to the artists this way, Spotify is basically stealing from the artists.
spiderman, I buy all my music on Bandcamp.
How much have you spent on buying albums in Bandcamp? It must be a lot if Bandcamp is the your only choice for listening to music.
dolle, I have 170 albums in my Bandcamp collection. I have a lot more on my mp3 collection which I have bought via other means. Each album is maybe $10 on average, so that is around $1700. I have used Bandcamp for around 8 years after 7digital closed their EU store and eMusic became trash. So that’s around $17 per month. Not a lot of money in my book, music means a lot to me!
spiderman, Okay, that’s a large collection. I am more interested to buy vinyl these days but they are too expensive here.
Lucidlethargy, Then you realize you aren’t paying $20 a month, and you buy a new album, that you fucking OWN forever.
Polar, $20 CAD gets you a family plan that you can share up to 5 people, so $4 CAD each.
Not sure what you’re on about. If you’re paying $20 for Spotify you’re getting ripped off.
Or you can pay $25 CAD for YouTube Premium, share it with 5 people, and get both YouTube ad free AND YouTube Music for $5 CAD per month.
I’d rather pay $4/$5 per month to access millions of songs than $20 for an album that I will get bored of in a few months, thanks.
pascal, $10 for an album? You lucky dog, here one album CD costs at that time around $25.
mathterdark, Discovery of new music is so much easier now with Spotify/YouTube/etc. In the past you had a slim-to-none chance of coming across a band/artist/album outside your local scene, no matter what the genre. Back then you kind of had to be “in the know” for that to happen.
beastlykings, Spotify maybe, I’ve never used it. And Google Play music used to be the best for this, but YouTube music has me stuck in a loop of my last 10 or 20 songs and I hate it.
If I’m listening to some techno, and I change gears to old school country/bluegrass for awhile, then, YouTube will never ever recommend techno to me again. Not unless I manually remember some of my favorite songs, search for them, and retrain it that I like techno. But then of course country slowly dies. God forbid I mix in hard rock, punk rock, or rap. It just confuses it more.
And it’s not just a genre problem, even within a genre of repeats the same dozen or two songs every time I open the app.
It’s not just me, I have a family plan and my brothers have both separately complained to me about the algorithms being worse than Google Play music, which is what we used to use.
I literally created a playlist called YouTube music sucks, where I save my most liked songs, so I can reseed the algorithm when I want a change of tunes. I need the playlist because I have a terrible memory and can’t remember all the songs I’ve liked.
Why don’t I change? Because I’m cheap, and it’s bundled with YouTube premium for the whole family. And it has no right to be as bad as it is. I keep thinking they’re gonna fix it, but I guess maybe people like being spoon fed their last 20 liked songs?
maltasoron, Spotify is really good with recommendations. I think they use different algorithms for the different personal playlists: the Release Radar seems to use my followed artists and all my playlists, while Discover Weekly uses my recent listening history.
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