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January 15, 2006

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» Music Like Water from Accident Hash
One of my personal heros, Gerd Leonhard, just posted a great post talking about his concept of Music Like Water. At this past years Portable Media Expo I had the pleasure of sitting down and talking with Gerd and speaking with him on a panel. The man... [Read More]

Comments

Maurice Brand

Thanks for your big and well-written report.

However, I would like to ask, are you losing it? :) There is absolutely no way that the model of Money Like Water is going to exist. It requires inhuman amounts of work, standardization, internet access everywhere and worst of all: communism!

My vision is pretty simple. There is no way that you can monetize music anymore. We'll have to accept that it's going to be free and find new oppertunities to monetize the brand. Any content will be free within 15 years. For an artist this means selling the show and the merchandise. For labels it means.. well, just dying and rest in peace.

I like your idealism, but don't see any realism. Do you still support these models, 1.5 years later??

Rory Gordziejko

This is a very interesting idea, and could potentially make things incredibly easy for music consumers. However, i would consider 1.5 to 2 million tracks to be a very low number. If only this number of tracks were available on this system, it would decrease diversity in unacceptable proportions. This would be my main worry about this system, being someone who listens to a wide range of different and in some cases very discrete and subtle genres.

Jan Michael Hess

Hi Gerd,

thanks for sharing your MLW blueprint in such a detailed way.

My first reaction is that this system sounds still too complicated. For the user it is simple to understand that they can get access to all music for just 5 Euro per month - a tempting offer.

For the industry the challenge is to distribute the pool of money being paid in by all listeners in a fair way to all the parties involved with financing, creating and distributing the music.

Of course, tracking the usage of music (listened on my iPod twice on 06 March 06) is a nice idea, especially for calculating real-time charts and other fame and fortune indexes. But I strongly believe that users don't want to be tracked. They might want to share a playlist on last.fm but that will be voluntary.

So if you can bring down the Blueprint for the Future of Music on one page that people can understand easily you will get more feedback to the ideas.

1 billion songs sold on iTunes is due to its ease-of-use. And before we have a new operating system of the music industry that enjoys high usability we need ideas that enjoy high usability.

Al Gritzmacher

While, I'll admit I need to digest this idea a while, it scares me as much as the present system.
While "music like water" might seem like a good idea today, it may end up as tasteless as water in the end.
We currently have a 'free' system for distributing TV and Radio programming where the cost is covered by advertising. Look how poor the quality of content that system provides is. It's worth what you pay for it.
The main thing wrong with the present copyright system is that it's being played by big business. Rights are bought, sold and traded like a commodity. The originators - artists, writers, performers, musicians - have lost control of their work and the system is bloated with corporate greed. The artists are exploited like slaves by contracts that promise the world, but rewards are nil because they're skimmed off the top by the corporations.
If we were paying now what the musicians are getting from CD sales, it would already be so inexpensive as to appear free.

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