New Nine Inch Nails album available for download

Nine Inch Nails has joined the growing list of artists who are distributing their music by alternate methods, without the benefit of a label or distributor.

Trent Reznor explains:

“I’ve been considering and wanting to make this kind of record for years, but by its very nature it wouldn’t have made sense until this point. This collection of music is the result of working from a very visual perspective – dressing imagined locations and scenarios with sound and texture; a soundtrack for daydreams. I’m very pleased with the result and the ability to present it directly to you without interference. I hope you enjoy the first four volumes of Ghosts.”

Although I’m not a particularly big NIN fan, I’m a strong supporter of any artist that self-distributes their music, so I purchased their $5 download. This is the future of music. Any artist who says “F* you” to their record label and sells their music directly deserves our support. As more artists take the initiative, the big record labels will go out of business, yet there will be more and better music available and artists will make more money by eliminating the middleman.

Unfortunately, the purchase didn’t go smoothly. Their servers are getting hit very hard, so it took several tries before I was able to get a confirmation page and my download link (thankfully PayPal was charged only once). When I actually tried to download it, every attempt timed out and failed in less than a minute. Finally, I got the “download limit exceeded” error. As it stands, I’m now waiting to hear from support@store.nin.com to resolve the issue.

What artists can learn from this is that their servers better be prepared for unexpected amounts of download traffic. A single server most likely wouldn’t be able to handle the demand. Instead, they should use a content delivery network such as Akamai or a high availability server such as Amazon’s S3 rather than hosting it on their regular server.

Radio David Byrne

I had forgotten about Radio David Byrne since I rarely listen to streams until I saw a link to it today at Cool Tools. It’s available in iTunes Radio under Eclectic. David plays some really wonderful, obscure music. The playlist changes every month. This month it’s African Pop. Right now he’s playing Thomas Mapfumo, following a track by Orchestra Baobab.

Vampire Weekend

When I went to the iTunes Store today to download the free single of the week, I decided to check the “just for you” selections. One of the albums it suggested several times was Vampire Weekend. I listened to one song and bought the album immediately. This may replace Neon Bible as my favorite album.

Like Ashley Maher, they incorporate African styles into their music, which they describe as “Upper West Side Soweto” and “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa”.

Missing Joe Strummer

Today I was reminded how much I miss Joe Strummer and The Clash. First, someone linked to this video. Tonight in the gym, “Bhindi Bhagee” came up in my shuffle playlist.

The Clash was so much more than a punk band. They blended genres from rock through Ska, Reggae, and World Music.