Showing posts with label Amazon mp3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon mp3. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Tron Soundtrack by Wendy Carlos Daily Deal: $1.99


Tron Soundtrack by Wendy Carlos Daily Deal: $1.99

While this sort of post is normally relegated to our Twitter activities, this is too good of a deal to not post here as well. Plus, I've been begging Amazon to offer some daily deals (and freebies) in the soundtrack genre. Well, they come through with WENDY CARLOS' classic 80s score to the original TRON. You can get it TODAY ONLY at AmazonMP3 for just $1.99!

It's going to be all about TRON LEGACY next year, you should really get familiarized with the whole world of Tron and aside from watching the film, what better way than immersing yourself in the music of Wendy Carlos...and Journey, too?

The original score to TRON is unique, electronic/orchestral hybrid experience with the flare that only the 80s could deliver. If you want to receive more immediate updates on the deals we come across, be sure to follow us on Twitter. Your purchases through our links definitely help to keep Tracksounds going, so THANKS!

Friday, June 13, 2008

More Music from Wanted by Danny Elfman Available

More Music from Wanted by Danny Elfman AvailableAmazonMp3 recently posted clips from every track of DANNY ELFMAN's upcoming score for WANTED. Give em a listen and share your thoughts!

Saturday, May 31, 2008

The Incredible Hulk by Craig Armstrong - Sound Clips

The Incredible Hulk by Craig Armstrong - Sound Clips
Finally. Some information on CRAIG ARMSTRONG's score for THE INCREDIBLE HULK is available... and not just information...sound clips! Amazon.com has clips from 22 tracks.

This sounds promising with the big, rumbling, type of score you might have been expecting, but also some surprises like a massive pipe organ. And...wait...do I detect a bit of the infamous lady-in-the-water-motif again? I believe I do.


OR you can pre-order the CD here

Monday, January 07, 2008

Top Stuff from 2007 #5 - AmazonMP3 and the Death of DRM

Top Stuff from 2007 #5 - AmazonMP3 and the Death of DRM
#5 - AMAZONMP3 and the Death of DRM!

Top Stuff from 2007 #5 - AmazonMP3 and the Death of DRM

DRM has been dying a slow death...but its dying. That alone was worth cheering about in 2007. With Amazon.com's unveiling of AMAZONMP3, the world of online music continued its rotation back to warming rays of light and away from the darkness that is DRM-locked music. EMI and Universal Music Group and Warner have been off the DRM train for a bit and now SONY/BMG has announced that it too will bury the cursed "feature."

Oh yes...this is good stuff. The dominos are falling and soon iTunes will have little choice but to let DRM go. iTunes is said to have something like 80% of the music download market, but if they hold onto their little idol of DRM, that stat won't hold for long. Steve Jobs has said that they will happily embrace a world without DRM...let's see how much he meant it.
Amazon's annoucement followed by Sony/BMG (I know. Sony's annoucement came in Jan. 08), is some of the best news of 2007...and we will see the repercussions long into 2008 and beyond.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Music 2.0 and the Future of the CD


Has the era of the compact disc come to an end? That's what some have said in recent years and a year or so ago I might have agreed with them. In many of my recent blog posts and even reviews, I've felt quite comfortable in expressing my growing dissatisfaction with the quality of downloadable music. Has the quality gotten worse? No...on the contrary, the major outlets have actually increased the quality of the music offered. Be that as it may, most of the downloadable formats are still lacking when compared to their physical iterations.

For that spry demographic locked down to a parentally-distributed-weekly-allowance, it makes perfect sense to try to get as much of their favorite music as cheaply as possible. Downloading music is perfect for them and, of course, it's super-convenient and tailors well to our tendency for impulse purchases. For the iPod-generation, iTunes, Yahoo music, Wal Mart, Amazon and the gobs of other outlets, have become their primary means of getting the music they want...and however much I'd like to lump myself into that "younger" generation in any way possible, I have to face the fact that (perhaps) I'm not just not. Wait let me say that properly, "I am so not."

I don't even own a pure mp3 player. I listen to music in my car, on my PC, from my laptop, or on my home theater. Ok...so my blackberry plays music as does my PSP, but that isn't the primary reason for owning either of them. When I listen to music...I want CD quality, at the very least. Now my journey to dissatisfaction began, the first time I burned a CD compiled from mp3s and then played it my car or home theater.

The sound quality of downloaded music, more often than not, just doesn't hold up, especially if I have just listened to a proper compact disc just prior to this newly-created-one. While it isn't as irritating like the old days of going from listening to music on FM radio stations to AM (for you kids out there...those are two different bandwiths on this thing called a "radio" pronounced ray-dee-oh) but I start to experience the same feelings of general disgust and revulsion that the FM/AM transition used to cause in me.

I know the question popping into your brain right now, "So what's the big deal?" The big deal is that if I pay $7.00 or $10.00 for my music, regardless whether its a digital-download or physical product...I want to be able play as loudly as I like on whatever over-priced piece of electronics I so choose...sans the drop outs and other fidelity faux pas inherent to digitally crushing the music down to as few megabytes as possible. Such quality might suffice for the teen with subpar, earbuds plugged into his tiny little player hidden somewhere in his backpack or jacket pocket, but for those of us who listen to music on those big, noise-canceling, mongo earmuffs or through our 7.1 surround sound setups, 192 kbps just isn't going to fly.

So, I say that the future of the CD isn't as bleak as some, or even you, might believe. I see a world full of possibilities for the good old digital compact disc. Perhaps dvd-audio will thrive or perhaps hd-dvd-audio is on the horizon. Or maybe the bog standard compact disc will see a resurgence. If you are a fan of film or game music or a collector, then rejoice because that is where some of the most fertile ground still resides for discs. Just take the LORD OF THE RINGS COMPLETE RECORDINGS series as an example. In that series we get great packaging, great liner notes, high resolution audio...oh and tons of previously unreleased music! Well worth the $60. Grabbing a hold of this potential market we now have a STAR WARS: 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION and PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN COLLECTORS EDITION on the horizon. Each with heftier-than-average price tags...but again, probably well worth it for hardcore fans and collectors.

This is the future of the CD. Adding premium value into compact disc releases is how I see the CD remaining viable in terms of sales. Not only will we be able to get higher sound quality, but we can expect more interesting packaging, additional facts and information regarding the music, and other digitally collectible items. Sure. For the iPod-generation, all of this may seem worthless, if not completely out of their price range. The CD still has life left in it...perhaps not as prevelant as it was at the turn of the century, but there is still a gleam of hope reflecting off of these little shiny discs.

Long live the CD!




Christopher Coleman