Tuesday 5 March 2013

2 and 3 March 2013 (Days 61 & 62) – The Weekend From Hell

I’ve just experienced a horrific weekend full of music related disasters and no listening.   My scapegoat is the absolutely bizarre situation that exists in Australia with respect to the sale of digital music.

It all began on Friday night when I decided to take advantage of the Australian dollar to download digital versions of albums that are impossible to get here in any physical form.  It was then that I discovered that you cannot purchase digital music from overseas iTunes or Amazon sites.  It seems that the reason is to protect local providers.
If this is truly the case, it is one of the more idiotic rationalisations I’ve ever heard.  iTunes prices in Australia appear to be about 50% higher than overseas.  This is for DIGITIAL music.  Just where are the overheads to justify the mark up?  It can’t be due to transport costs, warehousing costs or a rise in shop leases and I’m pretty sure iTunes isn’t one of the companies that attract the carbon levy.  As for Amazon, what is there to protect?  Amazon.aus is yet to be launched here and so denying Australians access to its downloads appears indefensible. As if to compensate for this, Amazon.UK did provide free delivery of books, CDs and DVDs to Australia for almost a full year but has since stopped this practice. (I suspect that if Amazon has a motive in denying downloading from overseas to Australia it is because they are planning to sell their downloads at the higher iTunes rate when Amazon.aus is eventually launched.)  No wonder the Government has launched an investigation into the sale of digital media in this country.  Even then I’d doubt that anything could be achieved.  After all, a free trade agreement is in force between Australia and the U.S and that doesn’t seem to have led to an appreciable difference here.

I’ve read somewhere recently that overseas companies deliberately charge Australians a premium charge in the supply of a great many goods with the justification being a belief that Australians are prepared to pay higher prices.  I do not know whether that is the reason with iTunes but I suspect the reason other industries get away with it is probably due to the way bricks and mortar retailers have not embraced the internet as a means to sell goods.  Last year’s push by some retailers to add a 10% tax to goods bought over the net was laughed at by the majority of Australian consumers and with good reason.  As so many letter writers pointed out, even with the 10% tax added, the goods would still be cheaper than those purchased in a store. Some of the stores involved in this campaign did relent and established internet sites but their sense of innovation over the net has been to do nothing more than provide a means for consumers to buy their stock for the same price as in their stores.
And this I suspect is the problem.  Overseas businesses know that established Australian businesses are largely unwilling to go the whole hog in using the internet.  As a result they can either set their prices in a manner that provides Australian consumers with the knowledge they’re obtaining goods at a cheaper rate that the bricks and mortar retailers that is sufficient to change their purchase patterns and nothing more.  Matters aren’t helped by the way Australian music retailers have approached the issue.  From what I can see for example, JB HiFi doesn’t even sell mp3s, preferring to flog its streaming service.  For a business that was initially sustained by customers who wanted to buy music in a physical form, this is a particuarly odd stance.

All of this provides a context, rationale, call-it-what-you-will for someone to actually want to download digital music for free.  I decided that, not only did I not have had a problem in doing this, I had practically been forced into it.   My justification was as follows: all I’m seeking to do is to replace vinyls and pre-recorded cassettes with a digital version I could burn to CD as the CD versions either do not exist or are not sold in this country.  Therefore a free download is justifiable given I’ve already purchased the music in question, was only seeking to update it into another format and did not have the means to do so at a reasonable price, if at all,  in this country.
This led to my second disaster as a result of downloading one such program.  Big mistake.  After doing this, I found that the service didn’t even come close to finding any of the albums that I wanted to download and so decided to delete it.  Finding the uninstall program was difficult enough and a few hours later had succeeded in deleted only part of it.  Unfortunately, the program had hijacked my browser and I needed to find a solution to that.  After a couple more fruitless hours on the net, it suddenly dawned on me that I had a software protection package.  Feeling completely idiotic, I ran it and my problem was solved.  Exit stage right free digital downloads.

Sunday did not begin well as I absorbed news about the previous night’s Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds gig at the Myer Music Bowl.  In view of the major shows I’ll be attending later this month, I decided to give this a miss.  After all I’ve seen every Cave tour bar one over the last 15 years or so plus Grinderman. Surely I could afford to miss this gig?  Then I discovered that the support act was Mark Lanegan and that the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra was also involved.  Did I miss news of these contributors or were these well-kept State secrets?  I decide not to answer this question all that self critically and go on to enjoy my Sunday, even making a few purchases.
Come Sunday night, I decide to add my purchases onto my iPod so I can listen to them on Monday.  Now I don’t know what exactly happened next but in a matter of minutes I had wiped all of the 34,000 songs off it!  I know that reimporting will be a time consuming hell.

Hence, this rant.

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