
The music industry-
rattling Radiohead album released online last month is set for its "traditional" physical CD release at the very end of this year,
according to British music newspaper NME. The album,
In Rainbows, will be released internationally December 31 and have a single pulled from it early in the new year. No American release date has been
mentioned. At the same time, the band has questioned the
report that many listeners chose to get the album for free when Radiohead allowed fans to choose their own price.
A statement by the band reads: "In response to purely speculative figures announced in the press regarding the number of downloads and the price paid for the album, the group's representatives would like to remind people that, as the album could only be downloaded from the band's website, it is impossible for outside organizations to have accurate figures on sales."
NME also adds that another part of that statement, "confirms that the figures quoted by the company comScore Inc. are wholly inaccurate, and in no way reflect definitive market intelligence or, indeed, the true success of the project."
If we are questioning the validity of the comScore report, we should also question its purpose. The simple fact is that Radiohead offered the album to fans knowing that some might try to get it for free. If many did, then it's likely the band sees no problem with that anyway. Its management has been on record saying that the download "buy for your own price" was essentially a marketing ploy for the physical CD release. Well, here we have the physical CD release, and the fans that did not buy the Radiohead-released physical "Discbox" will likely buy the new CD copy, in addition to the download (I can say that I will). In the end, the album may be released traditionally, but that does not mean the experimental download release was a failure. Neither does the fact that some fans "bought" it for free.