Correction: AC/DC's 1981 album For Those About to Rock We Salute You peaked at #1 on the U.S. charts, which means Wal-Mart's press release is wrong.
American retail giant Wal-Mart relaunched its online MP3 store Tuesday, and it's a worthy competitor to Amazon in the DRM-free MP3 sweepstakes. (To remind you: unlike many songs from Apple's iTunes, or Microsoft's Zune Marketplace, or Nokia's music store, every song sold on Amazon and Wal-Mart can be played an unlimited number of times on just about any portable device and in any software application out there.)
The new Wal-Mart store includes top hits at only 74 a cents per song, with standard pricing at 94 cents (a nickel cheaper than most), plus a free download of the week (hopefully it won't always be kids' music), plus one free MP3 download for every full physical album that you buy either in the store or on the Web site starting in November.
Highlights of Wal-Mart's relaunched MP3 store include exclusives, a free song of the week, and selected downloads for only $0.74
(Credit: Screenshot)But no AC/DC. If you're of a certain age and musical predeliction, you probably already know that AC/DC's new album, Black Ice, is available only at Wal-Mart--but not as a download. You might have checked out the new single, "Rock and Roll Train," for its first minute or two. But you probably would never have guessed that Black Ice has just become AC/DC's second album to top the U.S. charts, showing that big old rock bands don't need none of that digital computer stuff anyhow. At least they have a sense of humor about it.
Last week, George Harrison--who created the best post-Beatles solo album, the gorgeous All Things Must Pass--became the fourth of the Fab Four to go online. His full solo catalog is available on iTunes and other music stores now. Today, Led Zeppelin confirmed that its entire catalog will be released online Nov. 13, not just the songs on the new greatest hits compilation, Mothership. Zeppelin will also follow AC/DC and sell its songs as ringtones on Verizon Wireless.
Surely, the full Beatles must be next?
Among last week's digital music news was the item that seminal hard rock band AC/DC has taken a tentative step on the information highway (as opposed to that other highway). AC/DC's deal with Verizon was notable because the band chose to bypass industry leader iTunes, and because the band is selling only complete albums (for $12 apiece--higher than the current price of their CDs on Amazon!) rather than individual singles. Another oddity: most of AC/DC's catalog will be not be downloadable over-the-air to Verizon phones; instead, users will have to download the albums to their PC first, then transfer them. (The sole exception is the song "You Shook Me All Night Long," which is probably the one track that most non-AC/DC fans have heard and might be willing to download.)
Something about this story sounded familiar, so I did some digging. Sure enough, AC/DC helped Microsoft launch its MSN Music download service by offering a similar exclusive nearly three years ago. That deal was also for albums only. But the MSN Music download service was a casualty of the company's Zune initiative. Instead of making Zune compatible with the PlaysForSure program, which allowed multiple online stores to work with multiple devices, Microsoft followed Apple's model of tying the Zune to a dedicated store, the Zune Marketplace. Microsoft didn't want the cost and complexity of licensing music for two stores, so MSN Music got the axe. Apparently, the AC/DC exclusive went with it.
More exciting was the still-unconfirmed report that Led Zeppelin will be offering a new greatest hits collection, Mothership via iTunes. The Zep has never approved its music for digital download, although you could always find it via unapproved sites like MP3Sparks (the replacement for AllofMP3.com, which was shut down by the Russian government earlier this year).
Even more interesting, however, was the revelation of a new official band site, LedZeppelin.com. (The old familiar Led-Zeppelin.com is still up.) There's nothing there today except for the four logos from the band's fourth album, the release date of Mothership...and a link to sign up for updates. What sort of updates could they possibly deem important enough to create an e-mail list? Most fans already ahve all their albums or one of their earlier hits collections, and if we (yes, I'm a fan) really want this one, we know when it's coming out. Could the band be planning that long-rumored reunion tour with their original drummer's son? I can just imagine their reaction to the recent Police tour: "Those guys got $225 a ticket?"
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