06
Keeping the RIAA off our Ipod and Sansa
Filed Under (Entertainment) by
Cris Harshman on 06-04-2007
Tagged Under : angel-records, apple, blue-note, dar-williams, deviations-project, emi, Entertainment, Fatblogging, ipod, nettwerk, neurodisc, norah-jones, podcast, podcasts, razor, riaa, sandisk, sansa, shoutcast, tie, vanessa-mae, weepies
I am so proud of my wife - she is charging back into fitness like geeks charged the iPhone display at Macworld. The only problem is the discrimination she suffers - when she puts her tape player on the treadmill, not only do people with slim pure white mp3 players strapped to their arms sneer in disdain, but the treadmills no longer have a slot wider than an mp3 player! To celebrate her return to fitness, I bought her an iPod for her birthday yesterday.
I must say, I’m impressed with the advances Apple has made since I looked at them last. Dynamic playlists, assign playlists on the device itself instead of relying on iTunes, firmware updates through iTunes itself - I think this is the right player for her. (Well, it would be anyway - she adores the iPod and Mac commercials.) I still wouldn’t trade my Sansa though, for one feature above all others - flash drive. I still disdain having a moving-part hard drive in my mp3 player, and I suspect it’ll be a couple of years yet before 30GB+ flash drives are cheap enough to replace mp3 players based on hard drives. The Sansa is perfect for me - I listen to podcasts, not music, so my library is constantly changing and doesn’t require mass storage. The iPod is perfect for her - she listens to music, and likes to shuffle her fitness music.
Our main stereo CD player recently died as well; to replace it, I thought I’d take a look at some kind of iPod dock thing. I bought a Griffin TuneCenter and so far, I’m pretty impressed with it. I’d like to have digital audio out, but I realize that’s a pipe dream for a device like this. Not only does it serve up iPod tunes, but it also streams ShoutCast servers - there’s no way that I see to input a URL, but the main directory gives a semi-wide variety of stuff to listen to. If you like techno and rave, you’ll definitely find something to listen to.
Of course, a new iPod means she’s gotta have some new music. We LOVE Norah Jones - well, she’s not fitness music really, but we both want her new album. Remembering my soapbox about the RIAA, I decided to check Norah out on the RIAA Radar - crap! Blue Note Records shows a warning; a little more digging reveals Blue Note is owned by EMI Group. So now what? Is Norah worth subsidizing RIAA’s legal battle to whittle away both my rights as an “owner” and artists’ compensation all in the name of those same artists? That’s a tough one.
I wrote down another artist that I was interested in - Deviations Project, someone I heard in Barnes & Noble the other day. They sound a lot like Vanessa Mae, who I’ve seen in concert and is an incredible artist. Vanessa’s Angel Records and Deviations’ Neurodisc both come up with warnings; some investigation reveals EMI owns those two as well. Even Dar William’s indie label Razor & Tie comes up with a warning on RIAA Radar - does EMI own them as well? Thank goodness our new-found love for The Weepies (an absolutely FANTASTIC group, both in concert and on CD) is not mis-placed - Nettwerk Records looks safe.
Now that I’ve used RIAA Radar a little, I like it - it’s like the FitDay for my music consumption. I like that RIAA Radar has a link for finding similar “safe” music for RIAA-infested artists; I wish RIAA Radar had more information about infested labels.
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