And that's the real point to JBJ's argument: the itunes atmosphere only further promotes that ignorance. Most people don't even give the "other stuff" a second thought. They just click on the songs they know and move on. You can really experience (and by proxy, appreciate) an artists until you've listen to a good portion of the library. It's sort of like seeing a photo of The Night Watch in a magazine, going out and buying a print, and then calling yourself a Rembrandt expert. And that sort of ignorance has already severally damaged the industry.Mind you, I realize that the vast majority of people aren't like me, and treat music like McDonalds. They don't care about quality or quantity, they just care about what's easy and requires no thought, and like their music spoon fed to them instead of seeking out quality music on their own, and don't take music seriously. But not my problem, right?They don't know what they're missing out on by just listening to one song over and over.
It has taken the "Single, single, single! Sell, sell, sell!" mentality to a whole level. It's impact over the last decade is painfully obvious. The mission statement has become all about trying to compact "music" into increasingly smaller, prettier (and sterile) packages--ironically, a lot like Apple.
Even as J.T.B. said about the record trading is only half true. Even then, people at least gave an album a full listen and often found one or two other songs they liked. That doesn't happen anymore.
What happens when this starts to trickle down into concerts. The jam is already dead, but pretty soon bands are just going to come on stage, play five songs and pack up. When that happens, people are going to stop going to concerts.
Suppose this phenomenon was to start happening with film. People will just go on the Qucktime page, watch a few trailer, and not even bother going to the movies any more.
I also can't help notice that the problem most seem to have is not JBJ's argument in itself, but that he pointed the finger at Jobs.
