I STILL BUY CDS X
This post is for all of those who are like me and still buy CD's. Yes, I still buy CDs and every time I make that statement people look at me like I'm insanely stupid. A common response I get, "You know you can download music online for free, right?" A common response I give, "You can really download music for free online?"
Being an avid music listener, yes, I'm aware of this phenomena that allows you to download music online free of charge. Now, I know at times I have some hipster tendencies but I do buy CDs for a number of reasons; and none of them are to be a non-conformist.
The primary reason I buy CDs is to support my favorite artists. I do it out of respect. I know that they get obscenely rich from purchases and probably will never recognize that I personally bought their work; but it's respect from one music lover to another. At the end of the day, it's art that they've put their soul into for the world to hear. If it is someone who I enjoy and admire, I'm not going to mind purchasing their work.
The second reason I hold on to the archaic act of buying these artifacts people call compact discs is just because I like having the physical copy of an album. It's very subtle but you feel like you have more of a connection with an artist's work when you have the actual physical copy in your hands. The underlying theme of technology is to make everything more convenient. Sometimes, and I think in the case of CDs vs. mp3's, you sacrifice connection for convenience. You can have the file streamed to your phone, computer, tablet, (watches soon), but it's just not the same as having it on a CD. I will agree that CDs are useless at parties anymore...although it could prevent that one person (everybody knows that person at parties) from plugging their phone into the speakers and playing some obscure mediocre song that no one knows.
[most of my friends will feel me on this one] Buying CDs brings me nostalgia. I remember in 7th grade when Get Rich or Die Tryin' came out. I walked up to Harmony House and bought the copy. When I got home I sat at the kitchen table with my Walkman and let it play from beginning to end. Any of you who listened to that album remember the two quarters that drop on track 1? CDs just allow you to understand the album as a whole vs. each song individually, and allow you to respect the work more.
Just like records are to our parents, CDs will be the link to our generation of music. I'd say iPods are too but I think CDs will have a much more personal/human element to our past than a digital library. Call me a hipster but I think it'll be cool when I'm like 45 and my kids are like, "What is this?" then they pop in Yeezus and are in awe that their dad listened to that type of music.
-nate










