Archive for the 'music' Category

iTunes Store “Complete My Album” amnesty expires June 26

(Cross-posted from FatLab Music)

An big deadline is approaching for customers of the iTunes Store. This past March, Apple introduced “Complete My Album”, which gives you a credit against albums purchased within 180 days of buying an individual track.

But what about singles you bought long ago? Well, Apple set June 26, 2007 as the date “Complete My Album” expires for tracks purchased before December 28, 2006. (FAQ link)

That’s less than two weeks away, so go to iTunes and see what you can buy and for how much:

(all affiliate proceeds help me feed my dogs)
Apple iTunes

But before you get too excited, there are gobs of exceptions. Hidden in the FAQ is one catch 22 where you can be penalized for, get this, having purchased too many individual tracks. Case in point: I spent $7.92 to buy an album from my youth, Use Your Illusion II by Guns N’ Roses. I bought all eight tracks of the “partial album only” which Apple was offering, so kudos to them for letting me upgrade now to the full album, right? Nope.

The CMA FAQ says:

…if you previously acquired so many single tracks from the same album that the price would be less than the current price of a single song…, you will not be able to purchase the remaining tracks.

Since “Use Your Illusion II” now costs only $6.99, if I had bought less — only 6 of the 8 tracks — I could have upgraded for $1.05. Instead it will now cost me $14.91 total after I repurchase the full album and with it tracks I already own, in a DRM’d low-res format no less. It’s a stoopid policy which punishes individual track purchasing, and worse, it was Apple (or GnR’s label) who restricted me from buying the full album in the first place.

I like the convenience of the iTunes Store and all, but if Apple does enough of this, CDs on Amazon are looking pretty good again.

Tools of my trade

I’m up late mixing down theme park backing tracks for a Christmas-All-Year-Round kind of place. Actually, I’m not mixing. I just set a big multi-bounce in motion and DP is chugging away unattended. It’s times like this I appreciate the tools I have which let me run a full-scale music production business from a home-based studio.

That business, FatLab Music, is in our seventh year. The first five was solely our recording studio venture “The Audio Workshop”, and somewhere overlapping along the way we dba’d the FatLab name. Our mixing desk has undergone three or four major reconfigurations, and we’re constantly refining our setup.

Now, I see lists of gear flaunted on people’s sites all the time — as if seeing just the right Furman power conditioner in their rack will sell me on someone’s talents over the next guy’s. Whatever. A list means nothing — *why* I bought it (and am I still using it) means everything.

So, I’m starting a series of posts — something between a review and an endorsement — on each item in my music production setup. A little feature summary, some pros/cons, and what kinds of projects it gets used for.

But not tonight — it’s 2:33a, and for now my 9 week old puppy is asleep. Recording theme park vocals in 8 hours…