Submit Response » packaging http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog Tue, 10 May 2011 01:19:15 +0000 en-us hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.1 Asking For Trouble http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/08/20/asking-for-trouble/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/08/20/asking-for-trouble/#comments Fri, 20 Aug 2004 17:08:11 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=665 Asking For Trouble

I haven’t heard a note, but I just know I’m going love this 7” double pack.

Anything that comes with a mini-fanzine and ‘mystery found object’ just has to sound good, right?

(A proper review follows shortly. In the meantime, you might like to read a recent weblog conversation about music and packaging: Dan Hill says Money Will Ruin Everything, I agree that Music Is A Package and wonder about The Fashion Model.)

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The Fashion Model http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/03/03/the-fashion-model/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/03/03/the-fashion-model/#comments Wed, 03 Mar 2004 17:28:28 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=582 Following on from the previous post: I’m beginning to think - as Dan Hill originally suggested - that the demise of packaging in music might be limited to the mainstream, with the future of music distribution following the fashion model, so to speak.

As the major labels move toward music download services like the iTMS, they’re beginning to look a lot like the high street. Just as one might now drop a few quid in Top Man on gear that isn’t designed to last beyond the season, so the majors may well begin punting mainstream music as a semi-dispoable commodity; small, lo-fi files unencumbered by packaging for a few pence a pop.

Then there’s the independents. Like a designer’s prêt à porter line, they’ll serve customers willing to shell out a little more for the musical equivalent of a decent cut and quality cloth - the pretty sleeve wrapped around high-fidelity media.

Last - but obviously not least - come the specialist imprints, like our example label Rune Grammofon. These are the couture houses of music distribution, catering to a dwindling band of die-hards who demand the highest quality, most beautiful packaging money can buy.

Okay, so the parallels aren’t exact and I’m using woolly words like ‘mainstream,’ but it does seem to be the way things are headed.

Please feel free to return, laughing, to this post in 20 years time, brandishing a lavishly hand-crafted three-LP marbled vinyl edition of Now That’s What I Call Music! Vol. 7826.

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Music Is A Package http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/29/music-is-a-package/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/29/music-is-a-package/#comments Sun, 29 Feb 2004 17:28:19 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=580 In his review of the recent Rune Grammofon release, Money Will Ruin Everything, Dan Hill attempts to counter the idea that the days of consuming music as we do now - bound together with packaging, liner notes and the like - are numbered.

Denying the claims of the Forrester consultancy group that the CD is bound for obsolescence in the face of ubiquitous downloading, and Tony Wilson’s assertion that the iPod has invigorated the packaging of music, Dan says:

Poppycock. While the iPod itself may be kinda coquettish, the idea that digital downloads are the only way forward ignores the important work of several small labels who produce packaging which truly adds to the experience of listening to music; who realise that if you’re going to make something to accompany the music, you do it with the same care and loving attention to detail as the musicians themselves; labels that truly make a physical artifact worthwhile (and incidentally offer a way out for the music industry.)

At the moment, I’m working my way through Dust to Digital’s Goodbye, Babylon, a six CD compilation of religous music that comes in a cedarwood box packed with raw cotton, and an accompanying booklet full of essays, potted biographies and photographs of the collected artists. Taken together, the music, packaging and book offer an experience that goes far beyond listening - the thing even smells lovely - and this is why I happily spent £70 on it, waiting a month for it to arrive in the post, rather than downloading the lot on the day of release.

I do think, however, that this idea of music as an artform to be consumed with attendant artifacts is having a hard time crossing a generation gap.

Maybe Dan’s parenthetical aside is on the money, and packaging will return to the fore as a means of justifying the expense of buying music when it is so readily available free and gratis.

But I doubt it.

My generation’s understanding of music and the way it ought properly to be consumed is inextricably linked to growing up around our parents’ LPs. These were precious things, to be held gingerly by the edges on the way to the turntable, with lyrics on the inner sleeve to be learnt, and cover art to be gazed upon while listening. My introduction to the American civil rights movement came from the inner sleeve of Stevie Wonder’s Hotter Than July, I had an understanding of Pop Art from Blake’s cover for Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band before I set eyes on a Warhol or Lichenstein, and so on.

I don’t know any teenagers to ask, but surely those raised on CDs - with their illegible liner notes and cramped 5” square covers, not to mention their supposed indestructability - cannot hold the package in such high regard. Those growing up today, who consume music in discrete chunks as MP3 files, tracks burned to generic CD-Rs and - God help us - ringtones, might well raise children of their own to whom the term album will be wholly meaningless.

Even folk my age have music collections that ossified with the advent of broadband. They now buy external hard drives, iPods and streaming MP3 jukeboxes, but fetishising these things is analagous to drooling over shelves, crates and boxes. It is not, as Tony Wilson would have us believe, akin to appreciating the mixed media art object that is the record album.

I’m not saying all this is a bad thing, per se. Freeing the music from it’s packaging could, at a stretch, even be seen as a liberation of sorts. But it is, I think, a sad thing.

Call me old-fashioned, nostalgic and resistant to change if you like, but I don’t want music to become something served up naked and alone; I want it to be framed, contextualised, enhanced and made whole by its packaging.

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