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I might actually start buying music on iTunes, though I'm still happy with Amazon and eMusic.com. Pardon the tangent, but why is anything "out of print" anymore? I was reading my usual jazz blogs and got interested in Bobby Hutcherson. His album "Patterns" was released by BlueNote on CD, but the only copies available are selling for nearly $100 on amazon.com. Of course, neither BlueNote nor Bobby Hutcherson are seeing any of that. Why don't these labels make all their music available? Is there some marketing strategy I'm missing? On Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 5:12 PM, Dennis Moser <sinsofmachaut@gmail.com> wrote: > That is exactly what it means ... you now OWN the music you purchased ... > (and I get MORE money for each of those tunes of mine that you buy there! > Yea!) > > Best, > > Dennis > > On Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 8:07 PM, Bob Amstadt <bobld@amstadt.com> wrote: >> >> What exactly does this mean to the end consumer. Can I transfer a >> DRM-free track to any of my computers without having to associate those >> computers with my iTunes account? Can I turn a DRM-free track into an >MP3 >> file for transfering to CD for my car? >> >> Just curious to know what I'm going to get for my extra $0.30 per track. >> >> Bob > > > -- > http://myspace.com/usrsbin > http://audiozoloft.com > http://usrslashsbin.angrek.com/ > -- Art Simon simart@null.net myspace [dot] com/artsimon