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 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 5:54 AM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

...bad artwork could never ruin one.

"Decision for Chemistry" was absolutely ruined by the artwork.


It's just a standard nondescript "here is the composer/artists face" cover? Boring, okay, but that really ruined the album for you?


Worse than that. It looks like the label proprietor sent his granddaughter to a photoshop or scrapbooking class, and let her design the cover.

A great example of a reason to own the files and skip the physical release.

 
 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 6:18 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)


Worse than that. It looks like the label proprietor sent his granddaughter to a photoshop or scrapbooking class, and let her design the cover.

A great example of a reason to own the files and skip the physical release.


It's unlikely to win any major design award, I give you that. :-)

You may find the covers here more to your liking.
https://www.filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=104333

 
 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 7:27 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

I know, but I figured I'd mention it before people start talking about which cheeses go well with which soundtracks.

French scores, like Delerue and Sarde, go well with Roquefort, olives, crackers, and a cool glass of Chardonney, though Maurice Jarre is better with a glass of Merlot.


So getting back to the intrinsic backbone of the topic, I prefer scores that go with smoked cheddar and a strong IPA. Your Copland, your Courage, your Alex North.



And lest someone questions the topicality of cheeses, soundtracks, CDs and downloads, behold:

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/hip-hop-and-mozart-improve-flavor-swiss-cheese-180971721/

 
 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 11:33 AM   
 By:   Solium   (Member)

Just happened to come across this on TLOEG thread.

https://filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?forumID=1&pageID=3&threadID=14368&archive=1

Obviously download speeds are a lot faster than they were in 2003 but I totally agree with wanting something tangible and downloads are best reserved for porn.

Posted:  
Jun 28, 2003 - 9:16 PM   

 By:  
La La Land Records   (Member)

Speaking just as a consumer I'm very disapointed in this "experiment." I, for one, like to hold something tangible in my hand. The only things I ever download is the occasional free program or porn.

Plus, I do NOT like ordering directly from Varese because they use UPS as a postage service.

Downloading is a pain in the ass most of the time. Things take too long, they are corrupted, etc. . .

I'd rather take my chances, drive over to the local Tower or Best Buy and buy a CD ANY DAY OF THE WEEK.

Downlaoding songs is one thing, but entire score cds is just plain lame. To say it is easier to spend the time and money to download a score then burn it to CD is EASIER than getting off your fat ass and going down to the local "Record Shop" is just plain retarded. Yes, I could grow and cultivate my own vegatables, but I'd rather walk over to the local store (or produce stand) and buy freshly picked ones.

Call me old fashioned, but I'd take a good old fashioned CD any day of the week.

MV Gerhard

 
 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 12:29 PM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

Hehehe... Well, in 2003 I was very sceptical too about downloads, but I would have had to burn them onto CD back then anyway, as my home system wasn't ready to handle them anyway. Now in 2021, it takes seconds to download an entire album in high-res from legitimate sources, so things have changed.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 25, 2021 - 12:38 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

Hehehe... Well, in 2003 I was very sceptical too about downloads...

The only choice back then was mp3 files, and mp3s from the 1990s and early 2000s were nowhere near as good as they have become in more recent years. I am still reluctant to purchase mp3s, but will occasionally do so in a pinch to get specific tracks.

 
 Posted:   Feb 26, 2021 - 6:23 AM   
 By:   Max Bellochio   (Member)

No 35mm Mag Tracks = NO SALE!

VeryGawJus
MaxB

PS: yeah, this gets absurd after a while

 
 Posted:   Feb 26, 2021 - 6:33 AM   
 By:   Col. Flagg   (Member)

No London Symphony (circa 1980) with John Williams in my living room conducting SUPERMAN, EMPIRE, and RAIDERS = No sale!

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 26, 2021 - 6:37 AM   
 By:   AndrewH   (Member)

In the LP era writ large, vinyl was all the public ever had, and they would mainly handle their vinyl with grubby fingers on record grooves, leaving them out in the open for dust mites to feast, and wreaking havoc on said grooves by going AWA-AWA with two turntables and a mic-a-phone. Sure, others gingerly handled their vinyl at the edges like first borns in zero-g space bubbles, then proceeded to sip cheese and eat wine, but they are of their own era.

That took me back! I was one of the "others". I handled a vinyl LP a short while ago but the habit of how to take it out of the inner sleeve was still there! Hold sleeve, edge onto right palm, middle finger onto centre label, then left palm onto other edge.

Remember how we used to make sure the opening of the inner sleeve was at 90 degrees to the cover so it didn't accidentally slip out?

And being horrified, if you accidentally put your grubby mitt onto the grooves!

I think the way I handled LP's was so engrained, it transferred a bit into how I handle CD's. Though obviously less fussed. I have my Star Trek:Astral Symphony CD from 1990 - which, though looks damaged, still plays beautifully.

I think I've just reminded myself why I don't miss vinyl. Though the below is interesting. Apart from 45rpm 7" singles, I don't recall an LP ever being sold without an inner sleeve!

 
 Posted:   Feb 26, 2021 - 4:29 PM   
 By:   Max Bellochio   (Member)

No London Symphony (circa 1980) with John Williams in my living room conducting SUPERMAN, EMPIRE, and RAIDERS = No sale!

Stated with fierce conviction, I concur!

VeryGawJus
MaxB

 
 Posted:   Apr 23, 2021 - 6:34 PM   
 By:   drivingmissdaisy   (Member)

No CD no Sale.

 
 Posted:   Apr 23, 2021 - 7:48 PM   
 By:   Peter Atterberg   (Member)

I will buy digital if its all that is available but prefer the CD. If the digital maintains quality comparable to a CD then it doesn't really bug me. I enjoy having the tangible CD for collection purposes but if I'm honest my collection is not superbly displayed. Once I receive the CD I rip it onto my laptop and a back up portal hard drive. Through itunes, I sync the score into its own playlist on my iphone and I never use the CD again unless it's to rip it onto another laptop.

So either way works for me. I've gone on endlessly about how badly I want a release of the expanded GoldenEye score because of the John Altman Tank Chase cue. I guarantee you if that track ended up only being available through a digital purchase I would buy it. The best part is I wouldn't have to wait a week for shipping. It would be available to me the moment I purchase it.

Nothing beats opening the CD for the first time and reading through the liners notes as it rips onto my laptop. The tangible side of it is really satisfying.

So there are pros and cons to both for me.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 24, 2021 - 3:33 AM   
 By:   Randy Watson   (Member)

No CD no Sale.

No Sale No CD

 
 Posted:   Apr 24, 2021 - 3:48 AM   
 By:   DaveM   (Member)

Nothing beats opening the CD for the first time and reading through the liners notes.

100% agreed.

I buy a digital version when there is no CD because the music is more important than the packeging.
I also rip CD's for safety reasons on my Laptop but I listen to them with my CD player.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 24, 2021 - 5:32 AM   
 By:   ghost of 82   (Member)

My concern is digital being no cheaper and possibly only available in certain countries. Smarter people than I may know ways around the latter, but if digital albums had regional restrictions or only being available through certain vendors, it could easily be a step backwards, particularly for international customers.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 25, 2021 - 9:20 AM   
 By:   MCurry29   (Member)

No CD no Sale.


Why are you posting this? You better hope people buy your CD's and now Vinyl. Despite your meaningless post I buy all NOTEFORNOTE CD's. And at times order 2 of some titles. And I just bought Christopher Young- 50 Stages of Fright on VINYL. I am giving you my money and monetarily supporting your label. Now get to work and press up some MOVIESCOREMEDIA digital releases like our brother Dmitri at KEEPMOVING.

You are not funny.

 
 Posted:   Apr 26, 2021 - 4:31 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

Personally, I am happy to see more and more releases now being released as digital download, as long as these are released in a format that is lossless or better. I won't pay for an MP3, but will for an ALAC/FLAC file with the appropriate resolution.

CDs have also become somewhat of a storage problem for me, I am literally running out of shelf space. Currently, all my CDs are boxed up anyway (they have been since last year).

International shipping has gotten so high that it makes ordering some CDs rather unattractive. I recently ordered RUNNING MAN from Varèse Sarabande International. The CD cost €22,-, shipping another €14.- (together with two other CDs). I then had to pay €22.25.- import fees (thanks, Brexit!).

Worst of all, the wrong CD was sent... so I had to send the wrong CD back (another €26.99, which was reimbursed though), and then the correct CD was sent (which cost ANOTHER €21.12 import fee).
So not even considering the return postage (which I got back), the CD cost me about €60.- .. just that one CD!.

It's become ridiculous. Now Intrada's INCHON, on the other hand, comes now as a 3CD high-res download on Qobuz where it costs €14,49, and if you are a sublime subscriber it the high-res download costs only €7,49. No additional costs like shipping or customs etc.

Now I already got the previous INCHON release, so I do not need to have this one, but I really welcome the step and wish to see more of it. I much rather spend the money on actual music and not burn more than half or even two thirds of it on shipping and import fees and the like.

(Edited: "spend the money on actual music"... really not that important anymore to me if it's download or a CD)

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 26, 2021 - 5:14 AM   
 By:   TheAvenger   (Member)

No Edison’s phonograph cylinder, no sale.

Because technology shouldn’t evolve, right?

While we are at it, we should smash some textile machinery too.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 26, 2021 - 5:29 AM   
 By:   HalloweenBorg   (Member)

Personally, I am happy to see more and more releases now being released as digital download, as long as these are released in a format that is lossless or better. I won't pay for an MP3, but will for an ALAC/FLAC file with the appropriate resolution.

CDs have also become somewhat of a storage problem for me, I am literally running out of shelf space. Currently, all my CDs are boxed up anyway (they have been since last year).

International shipping has gotten so high that it makes ordering some CDs rather unattractive. I recently ordered RUNNING MAN from Varèse Sarabande International. The CD cost €22,-, shipping another €14.- (together with two other CDs). I then had to pay €22.25.- import fees (thanks, Brexit!).

Worst of all, the wrong CD was sent... so I had to send the wrong CD back (another €26.99, which was reimbursed though), and then the correct CD was sent (which cost ANOTHER €21.12 import fee).
So not even considering the return postage (which I got back), the CD cost me about €60.- .. just that one CD!.

It's become ridiculous. Now Intrada's INCHON, on the other hand, comes now as a 3CD high-res download on Qobuz where it costs €14,49, and if you are a sublime subscriber it the high-res download costs only €7,49. No additional costs like shipping or customs etc.

Now I already got the previous INCHON release, so I do not need to have this one, but I really welcome the step and wish to see more of it. I much rather spend the money on actual CDs and not burn more than half or even two thirds of it on shipping and import fees and the like.


Yikes why would you buy The Running Man?

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 26, 2021 - 5:32 AM   
 By:   Randy Watson   (Member)

Personally, I am happy to see more and more releases now being released as digital download, as long as these are released in a format that is lossless or better. I won't pay for an MP3, but will for an ALAC/FLAC file with the appropriate resolution.

CDs have also become somewhat of a storage problem for me, I am literally running out of shelf space. Currently, all my CDs are boxed up anyway (they have been since last year).

International shipping has gotten so high that it makes ordering some CDs rather unattractive. I recently ordered RUNNING MAN from Varèse Sarabande International. The CD cost €22,-, shipping another €14.- (together with two other CDs). I then had to pay €22.25.- import fees (thanks, Brexit!).

Worst of all, the wrong CD was sent... so I had to send the wrong CD back (another €26.99, which was reimbursed though), and then the correct CD was sent (which cost ANOTHER €21.12 import fee).
So not even considering the return postage (which I got back), the CD cost me about €60.- .. just that one CD!.

It's become ridiculous. Now Intrada's INCHON, on the other hand, comes now as a 3CD high-res download on Qobuz where it costs €14,49, and if you are a sublime subscriber it the high-res download costs only €7,49. No additional costs like shipping or customs etc.

Now I already got the previous INCHON release, so I do not need to have this one, but I really welcome the step and wish to see more of it. I much rather spend the money on actual CDs and not burn more than half or even two thirds of it on shipping and import fees and the like.


Yikes why would you buy The Running Man?


My guess, because he likes that score wink

 
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