industry

Purchasing classical music online

Submitted by Campbell Vertesi on Thu, 2007-05-10 13:42.

A friend emailed me this site recently, which looks at the state of online classical music stores.  The author starts off by explaining that Itunes has launched an initiative to improve their classical offerings, and that the results can already be seen.  They have an improved catalogue, with recordings of even the most obscure composers.  On the other hand, sound quality is limited, albums are sold track-by-track, and the search features are shoddy.  What is most interesting to me, is the figures for what makes the classical "top 10" in Itunes.  Andrea Bocelli of course (does he even still count as "classical"?), and Rostropovich... but nothing with an overwhelming sales figure.  Something is still not "clicking" in Itunes classical business model.

Alternatives are sites like classical.com or naxos.com, both of which offer streaming music for a flat monthly fee.  Both sites also restrict sound quality to something less than CD quality, and I'm not a fan of either interface.  The catalogues involved are impressive however, and it's worth a try for any classical music lover.

 Where do you get your classical recordings?  Do you just rip from your own CDs?  Do you get them from your friends?  Or do you have a favorite site?  

As far as I can tell, the only way to get good, high quality classical recordings in digital format is to rip them from CD yourself.  I have yet to find a service that really offers the convenience, price and catalogue that I am looking for. 

| »

Six degrees of separation in opera

Submitted by Campbell Vertesi on Wed, 2007-03-14 00:50.

Today your intrepid blogger received a friend request from one of his favorite blogosphere-colleagues: the almost-famous ACB (of the concert fame).

Once I got over my stardom jitters, and accepted the request, I did the traditional social-network-stalker dance, and perused through ACB's posted pictures... only to find them chockerblock full of mutual friends!  Well, hardly chockerblock - that's a lot of block - but a surprising amount of connection nonetheless.  It took me a full second or so to realize that my shock was totally unwarranted.

I work in a very small industry.  Everyone knows everyone else here - and the higher you get up that young artist/career ladder, the smaller the group gets.  Is it any surprise that some of the good singers I know end up in the same places, working for the same companies?  I uncover this kind of connection with my colleagues every day.  Still, it never ceases to amaze.  

Small world! 

| »