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Don Was on iTunes and the death of liner notes

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-08-11 09:16 PM
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Don Was on iTunes and the death of liner notes
from the Detroit Metro Times:





December 14, 2010
By Don Was


Got an e-mail the other day from my old friend, Steve Jordan – one of the greatest drummers on Earth … he’s played with everyone from Keith Richards to Sonny Rollins and produced a slew of artists like John Mayer, Solomon Burke and Buddy Guy. Steve asked, “How can NARAS nominate an album for best engineered recording and fail to nominate the mastering engineer?” It’s a great question: Denying the Grammy to the mastering engineer is the musical equivalent of awarding a Super Bowl ring solely to the victorious quarterback while ignoring the contributions of his receivers and offensive linemen. In the football analogy, it’s more difficult to overlook the other players because we see them on TV, hear the announcers mention their names and read about them on the sports page. How many of you readers have even heard of a mastering engineer? Don’t feel badly – it’s not your fault. These days, you have to launch a dedicated hunt to find out about these things.

Since I started making records 30-some years ago, we’ve always made a point of mentioning the recording, mixing and mastering engineers along with the musicians, arrangers, songwriters and producers who contribute to the records. When those credits were printed on a 12-inch album jacket, the letters were large enough to actually read. Fans got a real sense of both the collaborative nature of recorded music and of all the work and dedication behind every album. Subsequently, smaller CD booklets necessitated an almost illegible print size. These days, the nation’s largest retailer of music – the iTunes store – has essentially eliminated credits, liner notes and printed lyrics from their digital packaging. I’m at a loss to explain Apple’s ambivalence about upholding the quality and value of the product that has fueled the success of their hardware. For those of us who grew up in Detroit, this kind of corporate cockiness should have a certain ring of familiarity: It’s an early symptom of the same shortsightedness that brought down the Big Three automakers and sent the city into an economic tailspin.

In the summer of 1966, I bought an album called Freak Out! by a then-unknown group called the Mothers of Invention at Lou Salesin’s Mumford Music Store on Coolidge Highway in Oak Park. It was a double album with an amazing gatefold jacket that retailed for $4.99. Inside there were extensive liner notes written by Frank Zappa that changed my life. In a subsequent interview, Frank said that the Freak Out! album package was designed to be “as accessible as possible to the people who wanted to take the time to make it accessible. That list of names in there, if anybody were to research it, would probably help them a great deal.” He was right: The first time I heard of Charles Ives, Willie Dixon, Captain Beefheart, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Eric Dolphy was when I read that list of 150 random notables (titled People Who Have Contributed Materially in Many Ways to Make Our Music What it Is – Please Do Not Hold it Against Them). My friend, Michael Loceff, and I took a trip to LA later that summer just to check out all the locations that Frank listed as freak out hot spots. When we finally reached the hallowed portals of Ben Franks restaurant on Sunset, we felt like we’d become part of a movement – even if it was 10 a.m., and there wasn’t a freak in sight! Years later, I got to hang out with the Mother’s drummer, Jimmy Carl Black. I was tongue-tied and awestruck to be in the presence of this cat whose mystique, for me, was based solely on his portrayal on the inside of album covers. Frank Zappa schooled us in counter-culture history, gave lost teenagers an identity along with a mythology and provided four sides of groundbreaking rock ’n’ roll for five bucks! Some 44 years later, I’m still a fan – that’s what the music business is about. .............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://blogs.metrotimes.com/index.php/2010/12/don-was-on-itunes-and-the-death-of-liner-notes/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+StarTraction+%28Metro+Times+Blogs+%C2%BB+Star+Traction%29




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vi5 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-08-11 09:25 PM
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1. I get where he's coming from....
But it seems like some degree of curmudgeonly grousing. You can add material and art, etc. to Itunes records. I believe I have some albums that do that. It's probably more a factor of the artists and the record labels choosing to do that than it is Itunes.

Also, given that there have been advances in other information technologies, the information he's referring to can probably be looked up within seconds on the internet. You know on a computer, which is where people are listening to the music more than likely if they are listening to it through Itunes. If someone is so inclined that they actually care about that information, there are places to find it. People who didn't care about it to begin with probably weren't reading the credits on the records or cds either.

I understand his point but there are also still cd's and still vinyl albums. If an artist really wants that information to get out there they will still release in the format that does that.

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madrchsod Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-08-11 09:38 PM
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2. vinyl will last forever....!
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brettdale Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-25-11 02:00 AM
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3. an album is a piece of art
From the art work to the linar notes how every song acts with the other, itunes is killing music.

I think this and I agree with my main man Garth on this.
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