
credit teakettle via sxc.hu
The CD or DVD may be the last time you hold a physical copy of your favorite music, it seems official. As Wired reports the top industry names are looking to redefine the album in the digital age. The goal is to include lyrics, album art, and other particulars with the download. Is this really missing element in modern music?
Album art is a beloved element of music, but with band websites, Facebook, Twitter, dedicated apps, and a long list of other means to connect, buy, share, and revel at the majesty of favorite music is a new format really necessary? Another key point in the discussion is the format wars, the last major battle was in DVD formatting where Blu-ray(tm) won the battle. Now a “CMX” format is under consideration, a format apparently rejected by Apple and possibly starting a new format war!?
One interesting sidebar in the re-rise of the album is the lawsuit that Pink Floyd brought against EMI (and won). The battle centered around a contract clause that states a requirement to “preserve the artistic integrity” of their albums. At the root of this argument is the composition of an album and not a collection of songs. Pink Floyd created an experience with a story arc, ordering and arrangement of the work to convey an idea that is greater than the sum of the parts. While EMI bluntly claimed that they owned the material and the clause did not apply to new media formats (digital downloads) and was clearly looking to squeeze a few more dollars out of the album using a $0.99 item price stepping away form the (nominal) $10 album price point.
The Pink Floyd win underscores how the album, as a number of parts and ideas, is important. The issue at hand is “Do we need a new format?”. Unfortunatly this will not be up to the public to decide. Big music is failing and dying, the oxygen tank that is keeping their cancer ridden body alive is running very low. SOPA and PIPA were annihilated by public dissent, the industry is doing a poor job defending (bringing lawsuits) against file sharing. As contracts are completed more and more bands are leaving the legacy labels to release music on their own terms.

credit lawboy via sxc.hu
Consider Nine Inch Nails releasing a huge body of work on their own terms as well as all of the stems for remixing via http://remix.nin.com/.
Another band that went about their own methods is OK GO (Wikipedia/Band Site) where they suffered unimaginable abuse from their label (EMI) and finally freed themselves from the bondage of the corporate money machine.A fascinating story of suppression, lies, and everything you woudl never want to happen to your music.
Then there is another band you may have heard about named Radiohead. The “pay what you will” model they used for “In Rainbows” included $0.00 (free). And even with the free option in effect it was clear the removal of the corporate money machine was a good move. The band claims that the “In Rainbows” release cycle provided a greater net for the band members than all other works combined. That is serious business.
So now what? Do you want art? Do you want new players? Do you want a new DRM battle all over again? (remember iTunes removed a vast majority of DRM in their system).
Can we even tell these companies what we want? Would they listen? Do they care? Do they see the legacy business model as hopeless like so many others?
Since the 19080′s take over of the music business by lawyers and accountants and the consequential “firing” of the creatives and music lovers from the business the system has increased the greed-factor many times and in general harmed the music business to such a degree that remix culture, underground music, and applications like Soundcloud have become part of the new norm.
That new norm is in the hands of the people, as it should be, and most importantly out of the hands of the people who take advantage of truly creative people in preference of profit, exploitation, bad deals, and, as mentioned earlier, corporate bondage.
Free yourself now and support local artists, go to shows, like the fan pages, subscribe to twitter feeds, get on email lists, and buy merchandise from artists you care about.
Or you can be force fed what the lawyers and accountants think will yield the greatest profit.