From a
proud but disappointed fan who has decided not to buy this album:
Can we
also conclude that the CD “grows on you” after you…
I thought
that radio already fulfilled this roll of playing songs over and over and over
until you decide you finally do like them and decide to buy them. The problem with sticking with an
artist and forcing yourself to make their taste your own is that it gives you
very little time to appreciate new artist who might be as talented as Sting *gasp*.
I
apologize for the nasty tone of this e-mail. I don’t mean to offend I just want to get my opinion
across. Personally, I will
continue to skip the over produced (and badly produced) studio crap and wait to
here the songs raw when he does them live. That is when he really shines.
Ciao.
JP
-----Original Message-----
From:
police-bounces@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:police-bounces@mailman.xmission.com]On Behalf Of HM
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2003
5:39 AM
To: police@mailman.xmission.com
Subject: [Police] Growing
Can I conclude the CD is growing on
those of us list members who had the priviledge to listen to it so far?
We start relationships with
certain types of people and hope it is growing on us.
We move into a house in our favourite area
and hope living in this house will grow on us.
We buy a car of a certain brand even
if it does not feel right from the start - hoping the drive will grow
on us.
We buy clothing of our
favourite brand in the trust it will soon feel right on our skin.
And we buy music in this
trust the songs will grow on us.
DON'T WE?
Where are the proud but disappointed
Sting fans that have decided NOT to buy this album?
Let's not forget about the future and get
on with the thought that this album would have been made
available on emusic right away. You could purchase each song separately
for 99 cents a piece - which ones would lead the download list??
Would you download a second track after
being disappointed about the first one? With single-track download, the album
character disappears - where is the chance for a musician to tell a story?
How can then "a list of tracks" grow on us?
Thinking of this, I want to forget
about that future, get on with the present and hope that albums will always
remain being available as a whole "book".
Just another 2 cents I could not hold
back.
Holger