Motley Crue Single Does Better On Rock Band 127
Erik J writes "Remember about six weeks ago when Motley Crue and Rock Band partnered to release a new single premiering first in the game before anywhere else? Come to find out their song 'Saints of Los Angeles' was downloaded over 47,000 times on the Xbox version alone, beating out digital services iTunes and Amazon, which were tapped only 10,000 times for the single."
The doctor don't feel so good these days (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, 47,000 downloads is great and all, but there was a time when a new Crue album would sell in the MILLIONS.
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Does that mean in 20 years hair bands will rule again? I'm sure the ozone is cringing.
Re:The doctor don't feel so good these days (Score:5, Interesting)
I laugh whenever I see a 30 year old punk rock shirt on some teen. I mean, really can't this generation create there own rebel music?
Ob. XKCD
http://xkcd.com/339/ [xkcd.com]
Re:The doctor don't feel so good these days (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The doctor don't feel so good these days (Score:5, Insightful)
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The 'boomers are kicking our asses, indeed.
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2007 *did not* suck (Score:2)
As for the really big name acts:
Nine inch Nails - Year Zero(okay, was mostly a really striking departure from what we expect from music, but isn't that the point?)
Processor - My Industry (not technically big name, but should be -- released at the same time as year zero, so it was easily eclipsed, but it is well worth the download)
Radiohead - In Rainbows
Of course, the real
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Re:The doctor don't feel so good these days (Score:4, Interesting)
Or maybe any artform has a natural lifespan, and Rock and Rolls was semi-miraculously extended a few more times than likely as it is. Even jazz stopped innovating at some point.
And just maybe radio and the record industry aren't what they were once, so you're not going to hear edgy bands without looking for them.
Maybe there is rebel music. It's called hip hop, and a lot of emerging scenes in the 3rd world. Maybe there's still good rock and roll out there because kids are going to play the music they love whether or not they're showing up late to the party. Maybe garages and basements are alive and well and you wouldn't know because you haven't participated in any culture that doesn't require buying a ticket or subscription in two decades.
And who says rebellious = new. The bits of 70s and 80s punk that weren't safe enough to be marketable are still *totally* fair game for lashing out when you're 17. The best music of the past 30 years has all come out of that stuff, why stop?
Anyway, rock's older. It's got more cruft. That's just the way things go. Look at the movies. But the kids are all right. And all this spineless pitchfork crap will pass.
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Ozone (Score:2)
There's a reason the Montreal Protocol [wikipedia.org] came about in the 1980s.
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It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:5, Funny)
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Just because the English alphabet only offers you 26 letters to choose from doesn't mean that's how it should be. Though I have to admit, coding with a keyboard filled with those additional letters is rather hard (ever tried writing a C program and having to use ctrl-alt-
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I do
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How about
* As an online discussion goes on, the probability of a discussion of U.S. foreign policy approaches one.
Or perhaps a 'Kevin Bacon' approach:
* If the lowest 'Bush number' of any discussion topic (X) linked to another is N, X's Bush number is N + 1.
* The subject of U.S. foreign policy has a Bush number of 0.
Re:It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:4, Insightful)
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And I can't write them here and see them in the preview.
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No. I just use trigraphs! Much easier, _and_ more maintainable!
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Only the crazies use chars not in the first 127 of ASCII
You ARE aware that you just pissed off everyone in France, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Denmark, Spain... and let me not start about the eastern half of Europe which has some really funny specks and dots above, below and inside letters as well.
So, as the poster was saying, only the crazies use chars not in the first 127 of ASCII.
Re:It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:4, Funny)
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Ok then... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:4, Insightful)
Apparently anyone who really loved them also would not care to buy their new music...
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Apparently anyone who really loved them also would not care to buy their new music... :)
Indeed, the past tense of "loved" was appropriate.
I loved them to death. I remember when Motley Crüe and Def Leppard were my two absolutely favorite by far bands ever. I had every cassette tape of theirs I could get my little hands on. And I bought them all over again when I got a CD player.
And there they sit, in my CD rack. I took my favorite one out and actually encoded it into MP3 so I could actually listen to it again. After that, I didn't bother encoding the rest. My tastes, apparently,
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Re:It's Crüe, not Crue (Score:4, Informative)
Also makes it really funny when you talk about such a band in a German speaking country. You get corrected almost immediately... to the wrong pronunciation. Or the right one, depends on how you look at it. At any rate, it makes those bandnames sound very silly when pronounced "correctly".
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Of course it could also be they just had two great albums in them.
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This is why on their new tour they play 90% songs from their heyday. They new stuff is ahem... suckly...
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No good? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I just love.. (Score:2)
Re:I just love.. (Score:5, Insightful)
What's interesting is how much more the songs sold on Rock Band compared to iTunes and Amazon. This will, of course, be due to many factors, not the least being that Motley Crue has many songs that are suitable for "air guitar". This doesn't imply that other songs will have the same sales pattern, but might be worth noting for artists who produce music that is suited for Rock Band and Guitar Hero.
Re:I just love.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I just love.. (Score:5, Insightful)
The funny thing about online music downloads (and the MAFIAA) is that I'm more than willing to pay for all of my media just as I pay for all of my games, (which I can also usually download just as easily for free). The reason I pay for games is because the publishers add value like game servers, ranking and records, updates, and free stuff like wallpaper and screensavers.
I want to buy music, I want to buy video content, I WANT to support my favorite artists. But right now there is no added value for me if I pay, and currently I actually lose value by paying because the only time I am restricted in my paid media's usage is when I hit a DRM wall.
No one in the music and movie industries seems to want my money badly enough to actually work for it. And after the last several years of arrogance, lawsuits and being referred to as a "Revenue Stream" rather than as a "Customer", work is what it will take from the music and video industry for me to actually pay for music and video content.
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http://www.riaaradar.com/search.asp?searchtype=ASIN&keyword=B0018AK9QQ [riaaradar.com]
Re:I just love.. (Score:4, Informative)
"Eleven Seven Music was developed in association with ADA, a Warner Music Group company." says wikipedia [wikipedia.org]...Warner, of course being one of the Big-Four.
Worse, whenever I check and find that a label (seems) to have no riaa affiliation, and I actually wander down to my local (independent) CD store, I discover that it was still distributed by one of the Big Four.
I hate like hell to give them even a nickle, so that put some severe limits on what you can buy.
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Re:I just love.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Or, just a solid boxset with good art. Maybe in brushed aluminum. Something nice.
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That's where the "Work" part comes in. It's their job to figure out a way for their obsolete business to become relevant and start making money again.
By alienating their customer base with lawsuits and draconian DRM they have made their "work" that much more difficult.
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The reason I pay for games is because the publishers add value like game servers, ranking and records, updates, and free stuff like wallpaper and screensavers.
What about little things like ethics, morals, and personal integrity? What about paying for it because they created the game and are trying to make a living selling it? I used to download software, but have since stopped because it bothered my conscience. Heck, I even bought a legal copy of WinXP.
It's all well and good to hate the music industry megacorps, but that doesn't give you the right to blithely violate their copyright.
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What about little things like ethics, morals, and personal integrity? What about paying for it because they created the game and are trying to make a living selling it? I used to download software, but have since stopped because it bothered my conscience. Heck, I even bought a legal copy of WinXP.
It's all well and good to hate the music industry megacorps, but that doesn't give you the right to blithely violate their copyright.
Are you asking about MY ethics, morals, and personal integrity or the *IAA's? I already said that I DO in fact pay for games, and my OS is open source, I own several copies of various flavors of Widows given to me over the years at tech events, so they're legal too. What exactly is your point?
Poor games deserve poor recompense (Score:2)
And what about only paying for it if it's any good instead?
In the UK we have a thing called "fit for purpose": if you buy a physical product and it's not "fit for purpose", you can just take it back for a full refund. It's even enough that the item didn't "fit the purpose" that you expected of it (within reason), regardless of anything that it might say on the outer box.
I see no justification whatsoever
Less Supply (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems pretty straightforward. Unfortunately, it seems like people (the author of the article, for example) are going to remark on how video game songs are the wave of the future...etc, etc.
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I agree with your point: video games is not the future of music distribution. I'm convinced it's not the future source of popular songs, either. However, it will remain a source of high-quality music; take for instance warcraft 3, or the ripoff-ees of Press Play on Tape. Or, going open source, listen to some music from Wesnoth, Nexuiz, Vegastrike or Sauerbraten.
Wannabes (Score:5, Funny)
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Simon requires no timing, you simply memorize a (random) sequence and simply have a time limit with which to repeat that sequence back to the game.
In rhythm games, you see, anticipate, and manipulate the corresponding device in time with music. There is physically challenging coordination required on higher difficul
In other words... (Score:2)
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Bitchin' Camaro! Bitchin' Camaro! (Score:1)
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It's not just a song (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is awesome news. (Score:5, Interesting)
But selling tracks online isn't the only way they could do this. Why not sell your CD in stores, and include with the disc a code that lets you download all the songs into Rock Band/GH? That would go a lot further towards convincing me to shell out 20 bucks for it.
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I'm a perfect example of that (Woohoo, anecdotal evidence!). The Cars just had an entire album released for RockBand. I'd say I like The Cars, there's a few songs on that album that are immediately recognizable to me. The rest of them, not so much. But bought the whole album on RockBand because I really enjoy Rock Band and I like having more songs for it. I paid
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What does it all mean? (Score:2)
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That's because.. (Score:2, Flamebait)
So nobody wants to listen to the music. But people who play to a game like that don't care if the music is horribly terrible, so they downloaded it.
New rule: If your song gets downloaded more as part of a music
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Re:That's because.. (Score:5, Funny)
Hah, just means the music industry is dying (Score:1)
Disconnected markets... (Score:1)
Re:Why not? (Score:5, Interesting)
Many people are fans of 80s music of various genres, and that should be fully acceptable.
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The 80's called... (Score:2)
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Re:Why not? (Score:5, Funny)
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That said, having six "+1, interesting" mods and still
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"Your favorite band sucks."
-Rick
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