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Buried Repercussions For Obtaining Free Music

Articles » Arts-&-Entertainment » Music >> View Article

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By: Isaiah Henry

The advent of digital music has made music more accessible for everyone, around the globe, across age and society barriers. Now, whether you are in Japan looking for the latest American rock music or you are in Norway looking for South African hip-hop of the apartheid era. Any and all kinds of music can be downloaded from the internet � anytime, anywhere.

However, this is not without its pitfalls. Far from this proliferation being a boon for the music industry, digital music has managed to give them the hardest of times ever. The internet revolution has also bred music piracy at an alarming scale.

Regardless of the preferred genre, the majority of teenagers have an iPod or MP3 player and they are always listening to tunes. A device small enough to fit in the palm of your hand can hold hundreds, if not thousands, of songs. So your adolescent is likely to download free music online.

Can you burn a CD with the downloaded music? The answer to all doubts you have about the use of downloaded music will be in the terms and conditions of the website.

Besides, most of the music that you get from such websites is in low-quality formats, often with scratchy or high-pitched sound. Many websites also overlay the music with their own advertisements.

Naturally, the site is taken down and revamped to do the right thing and provide services to burn and download music, but it is not exactly free. Users are required to pay a subscription fee to download music to their computers. If people want to burn it to a CD, the subscription fee, to unlock the capability increases.

This is not to say that all digital music is stolen. There are a large number of websites and networks that also give you music for download, genuinely. These websites and networks usually enter agreements with music publishing companies, to sell and / or broadcast their music over the internet, and pay either a fixed fee or a royalty per sale.

However, some sites offer downloads on a song by song basis. What you plan to do with the song determines the amount of money you will spend, although the rates are pretty reasonable. Some sites even offer downloads for as little as a dollar per song. You do the math, to determine if this is a cost-effective solution to your music needs.

Different websites charge you for the music in different ways. Some charge a fixed fee for unlimited downloads, some sell complete albums, while most also offer pay-per-track downloads. Most websites also charge a small subscription / membership fee regardless of the payment pattern for actually downloading the music.

Paying for your music does not only satisfy your conscience, it also gets you value. Usually, you get album art, unreleased versions of tracks, lyrics etc along with the tracks. Also, the music is always in a very high quality format and recording. That means you also enjoy your music to the fullest.

If you are interested in music downloads, visit Any Music Downloads. Isaiah Henry has been doing research in this field for some time and has provided reviews on services such as eMusic.

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