After Pwning The Music Industry, Radiohead Are Pwned By Their Fans

pwned.jpgPresumably Radiohead hoped there would be some fans of theirs who wouldn’t take advantage of their new album’s “pay what you feel” gesture, but it seems most Radiohead listeners are brazen freeloaders.

Which, when you consider that most self-confessed Radiohead fans spend their time living in fifteen-room sharehouses and eating nothing but Two-Minute Noodles and sunshine, is probably not really all that surprising.

Yesterday, about a third of fans decided to pay nothing, according to The Times daily, citing a poll of 3000 people who bought it from the website.

“I chose zero, but maybe if I had a chance to chip in $10, after I hear it if it’s great, then I would,” said one identified fan from Australia, shortly after downloading the album.

The average price chosen was £4 ($9.10) – half the typical album price on online music retailing leader iTunes of around £8 – although 67 people paid more than £10 ($22.80), according to the poll.

You can still pick up a “hard copy” box-set for about £40, but really, isn’t that option now reserved strictly for suckahs?

Word has it James Blunt was considering giving his next release away for free, but no one wanted it anyway.

Comments

  • Dave B

    Cunning; all the talk of method of delivery diverts attention from the largely dready/sameish sounds therein…

  • Michael C

    It will be a riveting moment in history when James Blunt’s audience learn to download torrents. No fear of him losing royalties though, so long as he remains the soundtrack to weekend shopping at KMart.

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