Fan fallout begins over the quality of new Radiohead album
According to MTV news, the new Radiohead album In Rainbows, released exclusively online yesterday, is being attacked by some fans for the low quality of the MP3 tracks - 160 kbps. These fans are apparently upset because that bit-rate is only slightly better than Apple Inc.'s (NASDAQ: AAPL) iTunes tracks, but well below the available rate of more recently released DRM-free (Digital Rights Technology) tracks with 320 kbps. It is also below the standard rate (192 kbps) that many file sharers apparently "scoff at." Fans are also toting an ulterior motive of marketing the digital release only in preparation for the pending (2008) physical release.
The fans are certainly right that the release was in some way a marketing tool for the physical release. After all, it was not like the announcement was opaque last week, the managers talked about being in negotiations for the CD at the same time!
But is the bit-rate entirely important when you have the music to listen to? That is the question that MTV ends on with the proposition that in the wake of "fans upset because of miscommunication, or if there was some less-than-honest business being done by a band not exactly known for being cold and calculating" could it not be that "Thom Yorke and company tried to do something different with Rainbows, and as is the case with being first, they might not have gotten it right."
That is always the tell of a nice and new marketing ploy, though: the number of complaints. Although in this case you would expect the complaints to be leveled against the method, rather than the finer details of bit-rates. No matter what happens, fan discord or not, In Rainbows is a success because of its innovation - not because its bit rate is low or deters file sharing. As one fan told MTV, if the complainers would not focus on the bit rate "maybe they'd actually remember what music appreciation was and be forced to buy the album based on that notion instead."
The fans are certainly right that the release was in some way a marketing tool for the physical release. After all, it was not like the announcement was opaque last week, the managers talked about being in negotiations for the CD at the same time!
But is the bit-rate entirely important when you have the music to listen to? That is the question that MTV ends on with the proposition that in the wake of "fans upset because of miscommunication, or if there was some less-than-honest business being done by a band not exactly known for being cold and calculating" could it not be that "Thom Yorke and company tried to do something different with Rainbows, and as is the case with being first, they might not have gotten it right."
That is always the tell of a nice and new marketing ploy, though: the number of complaints. Although in this case you would expect the complaints to be leveled against the method, rather than the finer details of bit-rates. No matter what happens, fan discord or not, In Rainbows is a success because of its innovation - not because its bit rate is low or deters file sharing. As one fan told MTV, if the complainers would not focus on the bit rate "maybe they'd actually remember what music appreciation was and be forced to buy the album based on that notion instead."











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-12-2007 @ 5:42PM
Jeff said...
stupid article over a non-issue. they can shove the penny they agreed to pay for the album right back where they found it.
I do love Radiohead though.
10-12-2007 @ 6:17PM
Mark said...
A free album and everyone is complaining... Buy the box set and stop complaining.
10-12-2007 @ 7:42PM
Darren said...
Add me to the list of people shocked by the complaints. Besides the fact that you can pay as much or little as you like (I paid 3 pounds, which apparently is worth less than I thought it was), the album itself is really good, and possibly their best since "OK Computer".
(ok, maybe just behind "Hail to the Thief", but still better than I expected!)
10-12-2007 @ 8:01PM
Chris said...
It is not the case that a 160 kbps mp3 file sounds as good or better than a 128 kbps AAC file (iTunes download).
"AAC-encoded files sound as good as or better than MP3 files encoded at the same or even a higher bit rate.
For example, a 128-kilobit-per-second (kbit/s) AAC file should sound as good as or better than a 160 kbit/s MP3 file. Because the bit rate is lower, the AAC file will also be smaller than the MP3 file. AAC files allow you to store the most music on your hard disk or iPod." (source: Apple Support Website).
Chris
10-12-2007 @ 10:37PM
Richard Driver said...
Thanks guys. Further thought on this topic leads me to wonder if Radiohead is not even immune from the hate against the record industry. In the end, it may only be that free is never "free" with music. This is only the beginning and we will have more opportunity to examine the methods successes and failures.
It is a great album though.
10-14-2007 @ 9:00PM
starwxrwx said...
Perhaps the complainers ARE focusing on the bit rate BECAUSE "[they] actually remember what music appreciation [is]" and want to buy the songs online at full quality (in order to fully appreciate the music) and NOT "be forced to buy the album (the physical CD, therefore paying twice) based on that notion instead."