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Where to legally buy mp3 music?
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<blockquote data-quote="Captain Holly" data-source="post: 947873" data-attributes="member: 90494"><p>I got a trial offer for 3 months of Spotify Premium for $9.99. I am trying it out here, searching and playing a few obscure songs on it. The sound quality is very good, I use the Dolby equalizer in my laptop to make it sound better and the library is huge. I have been on Spotify before and thought it a nice touch that it still remembered some of my preferences and liked songs. I just need to learn how it works and assimilate it better this time. I know it is possible to add my own local library to Spotify, I need to figure out how to do that. i may try Deezer at some point too.</p><p></p><p>I guess this is the way to experience music in the 21st century. I have read and heard musicians on some sites say how they don't really feel the desire to write or promote albums because no one buys albums now, we just stream everything. If I really like an album, I will buy a copy of it, but there are very few new bands now that play what I like to hear. When I do buy an mp3 album or rip a CD to MP3 I also use a freeware program MP3Gain to adjust the recording levels to cut out any clipping and normalize the volume on all the tracks. I can't do that on streamed content. I still think $10.00 every month is too much to pay for music I don't own, but the complete service packages on Spotify and the other streaming platforms is probably still worth it. I just need to get used to it.</p><p></p><p>C.H.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Captain Holly, post: 947873, member: 90494"] I got a trial offer for 3 months of Spotify Premium for $9.99. I am trying it out here, searching and playing a few obscure songs on it. The sound quality is very good, I use the Dolby equalizer in my laptop to make it sound better and the library is huge. I have been on Spotify before and thought it a nice touch that it still remembered some of my preferences and liked songs. I just need to learn how it works and assimilate it better this time. I know it is possible to add my own local library to Spotify, I need to figure out how to do that. i may try Deezer at some point too. I guess this is the way to experience music in the 21st century. I have read and heard musicians on some sites say how they don't really feel the desire to write or promote albums because no one buys albums now, we just stream everything. If I really like an album, I will buy a copy of it, but there are very few new bands now that play what I like to hear. When I do buy an mp3 album or rip a CD to MP3 I also use a freeware program MP3Gain to adjust the recording levels to cut out any clipping and normalize the volume on all the tracks. I can't do that on streamed content. I still think $10.00 every month is too much to pay for music I don't own, but the complete service packages on Spotify and the other streaming platforms is probably still worth it. I just need to get used to it. C.H. [/QUOTE]
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