The 5 greatest ways digital music has rocked our world

Are you an MP3 spirit?

Published by Joel Willans on December 4, 2012

Smartphone users are some of the heaviest consumers of music, with 42% claiming to have a collection of between 2000 and 5000 songs. There was a time, not so long ago, when only the most hardcore music aficionados would have such a staggering collection. But digital music has changed all that. And that’s not all it’s changed.

1. Freed music from physical objects.

In 1987, Karlheinz Brandenburg chose Suzanne Vega’s “Tom’s Diner” as the first song to fine tune his MP3 compression algorithm. The human voice being the hardest sound to compress, Vega’s a capella version of the song provided the perfect challenge for Brandenburg to test bitrates and further refine his codec. Little did he know then that eleven years later, with the advent of the first portable MP3 devices, his invention would liberate us and music. No longer was it bound to records, tapes or discs. For the first time in human history, music was freed from physical objects.

2. More music for the masses

If it wasn’t for the fact that music fans learnt to rip a CD into MP3s, we could still be waiting to buy music online. Why? Because record companies had a very profitable and cozy arrangement selling music via retailers. The large scale copying of MP3s meant record companies had no choice but to share the digital music love. Now, you can listen to a breathtaking array of music on your JBL Powerup speakers  from services as diverse as Spotify, Last FM and Nokia Music.

3. Choice, choice, choice

The MP3 has made it easier than ever to be a music junkie. Long gone are the times when to know about the latest bands you had to scour the music press or go to gigs in seedy basements. Albums that might have before taken months to track down can now be found and listened to with a quick online search. What’s more, with apps like Shazam, even if you forget a band’s name, you can find out who they are in seconds. Plus record companies no longer get to dictate what we listen to.

4. Helped launch Web 2.0

Until everyone started downloading MP3s from places like Napster, people found it tough to justify spending the extra cash on broadband. Faster Internet was nice, but was it really worth the extra investment? Suddenly being able to download tons of MP3s through file sharing meant it was. And once people upgraded to broadband, web designers could create more amazing web pages. Web 2.0 would undoubtedly have happened eventually anyway, but without the incentive of MP3s it would have taken a lot longer.

5. Gave new bands a break

Which brings us to the last amazing way, and certainly for some people the most important. There are now loads of great websites for checking out new bands, places like thesixtyone, Ourstage and PureVolume, which cater specifically to upcoming bands, letting them upload their music for our listening pleasure. Before the advent of digital music, these potential superstars would never have had the chance to get their songs listened to by millions. Now we can decide if they’re any good. Not some record company executive.

Think of any other great ways MP3s have rocked our world? Drop us a note in the comments below.

Image credit: Eurok +Birgerking

Comments

  • http://www.facebook.com/goldiedust2012 Goldie Dust

    Thanks! Now going to have Toms Diner in my head for the rest of the day. But happy to hear it was a classic like that was the first mp3 and not some eighties crap soft rock!

  • jlangfel

    Thanks, it is amazing how I can carry around in my pocket that which years ago would have taken up feet of shelf space.

  • http://twitter.com/eoin_oriordan eoin o’riordan

    But still…
    there is something different about having a physical object in your hands… the reliving of memories as you flick through your record or CD collection isn’t the same as whizzing through them on an MP3 player…
    Maybe i’m too much of a luddite!

    • http://www.facebook.com/MarkAReynolds Mark Reynolds

      Yep!

  • http://twitter.com/haroldlgardner Harold Gardner

    It is so freeing to be able to avoid the physical media and have access to your music anytime and anywhere. It is a place where the promise of cloud computing has really delivered.

  • http://twitter.com/Cranelake10 Cranelake

    Number 6 has got to be sharing. Now I can share stuff with people I’ve never met half away around the world and they share back. Only sad this is i realize there so much music and so little time :)

  • MissHpdaze

    I’m soooo old school. Love digital music for the freedom it gives, but also think it makes music more throwaway. When i was a little girl i used to treasure a CD. Not so with mp3s

  • http://www.facebook.com/pamlee.yl Pamela Lee

    A very positive take on the benefits of digital music. Informative and interesting. :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/MarkAReynolds Mark Reynolds

    People still need to be aware of copyright laws, of course. Though when I was a ‘naughty’ person in my youth, it was amazing how much time we put into copying & splicing just to have a small collection! It’s also great to see that the MP3 revolution has created a culture where some content creators are quite happy to share without copyright issues.

  • waynemansfield

    I must be getting too old… I didn’t understand the blog at all

  • http://twitter.com/volarymusic Volary music

    The freedom of mp3s is great, but I do miss the days when people bought albums to experience the full story of what an artist has to say, rather than random hits.

    • mikeandroe

      You can still buy full albums, and nearly every MP3 player maintains libraries so you can play a full album uninterrupted. FWIW, the shift from albums to singles happened before digital music became big.

  • http://www.facebook.com/tomlaing Tom Laing

    I really am quite naive when it comes to this aspect of music collecting, sharing and listening – it’s not something i do even though my phone is capable, as is my notebook, my computer too! I found the comments below interesting – Volary’s the loss of appreciation of an album; the issue of copyright from Mark; Eoin and the difference in something physical and the virtual collection. What have we lost and what have we gained?

  • http://twitter.com/asvirta55 flashforward

    wow

  • mikeandroe

    How are hard drives, flash drives, etc.. not “physical objects”?

  • http://www.tourabsurd.com/ Katrina

    Now if only we can get rid of DRM and bring music industry in line with actual copyright law, not with their control freak based interpretation of it.

  • http://twitter.com/LORI_SF Lori Kober

    I prefer youtube and music streaming than using iTunes to build a music library