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Note that this is not the case with the others here, many of which are expanding sales for smaller labels who otherwise get lost trying to reach their niches on big stores like iTunes.This isn’t going to surprise anyone, but I don’t download music from iTunes. Victory Records is pulling out of eMusic as it drives costs down to 25 cents a track. One thing about legal services: labels can simply leave, and sometimes rightfully so. Lower music prices mean lower revenues for labels and artists, so the industry is balking. What about eMusic? A couple of you have raised issue with eMusic. For a nice lineup of these in the US, see Stylus Magazine’s roundup.

And favorite brick-and-mortar record stores count, too, as CDs and vinyl remain great, high-quality, DRM-free formats. Where do you purchase your music? Let us know in comments. Ultimately, why bother with the philosophical arguments about DRM-free music when the practical benefits are so clear?

#Drm free music download portable
And what you get is DRM-free, high-quality music that can fill up players on every platform (Mac, Windows, Linux) and every portable player, without any of the pains of buying music from iTunes. Interestingly, many of these outlets can be cost-efficient, particularly if you fill out your collection on eMusic. (I’ll be sure to cover their launch here, in the final blow that will destroy our wallets.) If you’ve never been to Other - like, say, you’re not in New York - these guys cover absolutely everything, from rock to experimental Classical.
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DRM-free digital downloads are nothing new, once you get away from iTunes and the big Windows stores. With one label leading the way, other labels and other stores may follow.īut “news”? Not really to the readers of CDM. Those tracks will instantly be compatible with other players that support AAC (including, oddly enough, Microsoft’s Zune), and there’s even talk (via Microsoft statement) that Zune itself will go the same direction. It’s great news that EMI has decided to drop DRM from its music and video catalogs offered on iTunes.

Brick-and-mortar and DRM-free: NYC’s Other Music, soon to be online for those of you not near the 6 train, as endorsed by Ben Chang for “On the Inside Info.”
