Trent Reznor compares Neil Young’s Pono player to ‘a Toblerone’
Read more at http://www.nme.com/news/nine-inch-nails/76409#hRpXhlVl2T2REMvm.99
Read more at http://www.nme.com/news/nine-inch-nails/76409#hRpXhlVl2T2REMvm.99
Neil Young’s music service has no chance, says Troy Wolverton, technology columnist the Mercury News in San Jose, Calif.
“Oh Po-No…”
His article appeared in The Columbia Dispatch and he writes that: “Pono would have consumers step back in time. They would have to carry around separate phones and music players again. And they would pay $400 for that music device — which, in an increasingly connected world, is resolutely disconnected. The only way to get music on it is by transferring it from a computer over a USB cable.”
“You can’t buy a song when you’re away from your computer and you can’t stream it to the device. The company’s not even working on a smartphone application that might be able to offer Pono customers some connectivity or instant gratification.
“Because the PonoPlayer isn’t connected, it can’t access to your entire music collection or the universe of available music. Instead, it can only play what’s stored on it, which, if the songs are all in the high-resolution format it’s promoting, is only about 800 songs.”
Read more at: http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/business/2014/03/24/neil-youngs-music-service-has-no-chance.html
David Crosby mentions Neil Young in an interview posted on AccessAtlanta.com.
Melissa Ruggieri writes of Crosby: “There’s a different kind of love for the erstwhile Neil Young, who is currently working on another album and book as well as helping develop Pono, a high-resolution digital music download service and music player set to debut in October. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that CSNY is extinct. Or maybe it is. No one is ever quite sure, it seems.”
“It’s difficult to know. He already told us once that he was going to (be back with us) and changed his mind, and now he’s making noises that he wants to do it again,” Crosby said. “God bless Neil. I love him and I love working with him because he so completely wants to push the edge, but he’s a very mercurial guy. I can’t count on him, but I do love to play with him.”
Read more at: http://www.accessatlanta.com/weblogs/atlanta-music-scene/2014/mar/19/david-crosby-talks-health-solo-album-and-neil-youn/
This one is for Wolle.
This is hardcore, says Slate .
Superfans are driving the entertainment business. Neil Young’s Pono digital musical player has raised more than $4 million from fans on Kickstarter. Yikes.
The lead in the article talks about Neil but the rest is a tale of how things fans are driving the things they love through these sorts of campaigns.
It’s been a big month for small projects on Kickstarter, writes Slate author Jon Nathanson. First a consortium of musicians and industry veterans, fronted by Neil Young, used the site to launch Pono, a digital music player and download service. Young and his partners set a fundraising goal of $800,000, to be reached within 35 days.
Instead, they met that goal in under a day, then broke $2.5 million in their first 60 hours. At the time of this writing, Pono has exceeded $4 million in pledges. (The campaign will run through April 15; Pono is scheduled to launch in October.)
A few days later, Warner Bros. released a Veronica Mars movie in theaters and online. The film grossed $2 million at only 291 theaters worldwide, with a healthy $6,945 per-screen average. The movie owed its existence to Kickstarter—Rob Thomas, creator of the original TV series, raised $5.7 million on Kickstarter last year to fund production of the feature.
überfans.
Nathanson writes: “But crowdfunding isn’t catering to the mainstream crowd. When 3 million of us pledged $480 million to Kickstarter projects in 2013, we didn’t establish any new industries or shake up any old ones. Instead, we identified ourselves as the early adopters: the hardcores, the überfans. We’re the kind of people who, in absence of Kickstarter, would have bought the special edition of a Veronica Mars DVD or paid extra for better seats at a Neil Young concert. We’re the kind of people who download all the value-added content in our favorite video games. When something’s labeled “collectible,” we’re the ones collecting it.”
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