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Recherche Sur La Musique Électronique
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nicolas_Engourdi replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 1:57pm
nicolas_engourdi
Coolness: 35490
Bonjour,

Nous sommes des étudiants en marketing (Université du Québec à Montréal) effectuant une recherche sur la consommation de la musique électronique. Le but de la recherche est de pouvoir mieux étudier le comportement des consommateurs et/ou des acheteurs de musique électronique sous format disque compact et/ou mp3. Nous vous invitons cordialement à participer à notre recherche en répondant à un questionnaire qui vous demandra environ 5 à 7 minutes de votre temps. Merci!

Vous trouverez ce questionnaire à l'adresse WEB suivante:

[ www.thesistools.com ]

Avant d'accèder au questionnaire, il y a une demande d'entrer votre adresse de messagerie. Si vous n'êtes pas confiant à diffuser cette information, veuillez indiquez une adresse improvisé du type "nimportequoi@hotmail.com". Si au contraire vous donnez votre adresse de messagerie réel, mais que vous ne voulez pas recevoir de courrier de la part de l'entreprise qui héberge le questionnaire, décochez la case approprié.

Aussi, si vous connaissez des gens qui écoutent de la musique électronique, il nous serait utile que vous leur faites parvenir ce message.

Merci!

Nicolas Engourdi
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» SebastianPrelar replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:02pm
sebastianprelar
Coolness: 64745
Originally posted by NICOLAS ENGOURDI...

Le but de la recherche est de pouvoir mieux étudier le comportement des consommateurs et/ou des acheteurs de musique électronique sous format disque compact et/ou mp3.

Nicolas Engourdi


T'oublit l'essentiel. La source. La racine. Le meilleur..... VINYL.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» beercrack replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:04pm
beercrack
Coolness: 71390
word. vinyl.
je viens de repondre au questionnaire ;)
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nicolas_Engourdi replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:11pm
nicolas_engourdi
Coolness: 35490
Je sais, on a pas mis les vinyles, en fait ce qu'on essai d'établir, c'est la relation disque compact et MP3...
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» SebastianPrelar replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:22pm
sebastianprelar
Coolness: 64745
dommage, ironique meme, aprce que tu passe a coté du pilier de la musique electronique. Enfin, fais comme tu veux...
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nitrous_N2O replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:29pm
nitrous_n2o
Coolness: 125380
Bouuuuuu

Le jours où il n'y auras plus de vinlyle je vais arrêter de mixer ça c`est sûr...
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nitrous_N2O replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:34pm
nitrous_n2o
Coolness: 125380
For some, vinyl LPs still groovy

CANDICE CHOI
NEW YORK TIMES SERVICE

LOS ANGELES—Vinyl records may crackle with sounds from the past, but they're not fading anytime soon as music lovers preserve the nostalgic format.

The industry which gathered last night to celebrate the best of 2004's music and artists at the Grammy awards, has seen rapid changes in technology. But many bands — old and new — are luring consumers with an admittedly out-dated mode.

"It's the warmth of the sound," said Mike Strauss, a 25-year-old disc jockey who collects vinyl records and hasn't bought a CD in years.

The shiny black records are also rich mining ground for rare songs that were never transferred to CD, making them treasure troves for music aficionados.

"It's that one obscure B-side on that 12-inch that isn't on the CD. There will always be people who want that damn song," said Strauss, who works at The Basement, which specializes in hip-hop vinyls in Sherman Oaks, a district of Los Angeles.

CDs far and away rake in the lion's share of sales, but vinyl records have a dedicated following that have kept sales steady, said Michael Gartenberg, vice-president of Jupiter Research, which monitors technology trends.

In 2003, 746 million CDs were shipped, compared with 1.5 million LP/EPs. At the half-year mark in 2004, 329 million CDs were shipped compared with 700,000 LP/EPs, indicating the vinyl format is holding firm as CD sales could be experiencing declines, said RIAA spokesperson Jonathan Lamy.

"Vinyl aficionados never went away," Gartenberg said.

DJs are greatly responsible for the survival of the vinyls, which are used for spinning at clubs despite the introduction of CD spin tables several years ago.

"DJ culture is bringing vinyls back," said Jim Rainwater, manager of Fingerprints in Long Beach. Just six years ago, the record shop only devoted two rows to vinyls; now half the store is set aside.

Vinyl plays a key role in hip-hop culture, said KC, a disc jockey who hosts an evening show called Love Zone on Inland Empire-based contemporary hits/rhythmic radio station KGGI-FM, serving the Los Angeles area.

"It's a sound that's at the root of hip-hop," KC said. "It allows the DJ to be pretty creative, to have control. They can put their hands on the record, stop it, slow it down and speed it up.''

Although the vast majority of music on the radio is digital, he said, hip-hop stations frequently air DJs mixing vinyl.

But other genres like acid jazz are putting a spotlight on vinyl too, KC said. The result is an influx of "bedroom DJs" who are trekking out to record stores in search of vinyl.

It's no wonder big-name bands like U2 and No Doubt release their albums on vinyl; it's a way to get DJs and college stations to play their records and get exposure, Strauss said.

The appeal of vinyl is reaching new markets too.

A diverse collection of customers comes into Groove Time in San Bernardino, Calif., which has specialized in vinyl records for the past 30 years.

"It's everyone from the older crowd who wants to hear the polka to the young kids who want the latest 12-inch to the Elvis collector," said David Bernal, an assistant manager who's worked at the shop for 25 years.

The interest in vinyl has surged in recent years; Bernal said the store recently bought a three-storey building to open a warehouse-style shop for those who want to buy in bulk. Many travel miles and even fly in from overseas to track down a particular album, he said.

Part of the allure of vinyl is the large-format cover art and a ``softer, warmer sound," said James Agren, owner of Darla Records, an independent record label in the Bay Area.

Artists popular with older crowds often release new albums on vinyl to appeal to a certain sense of nostalgia, Agren said.

In recent years, however, Bernal said, a younger crowd has been coming into Groove Time. This type of customer is usually eager to discover the "thousands and thousands of old music greats" never found on CDs, he said.

Vinyl has always been a steady seller at the Rhino Records in Claremont, Calif., said manager Taylor Kingsbury.

Seeing a 13-year-old buy a vinyl album is nothing unusual these days, he said.

Vinyl lends an aura of authenticity and street cred that youth seems to crave, Bernal said. In fact, he said, many kids often don't ask for bags because they want to be seen walking down the street with their Miles Davis record under their arm.

"It's a novelty and retro thing," Bernal said.

Jessica Pearson, a 20-year-old North Hollywood, Calif., DJ, said she can't exactly explain what makes vinyl so appealing. "It's just so old-school," said Pearson, who began collecting vinyls six years ago. Among the more notable albums in her six-year collection are a rare Nine Inch Nails album and several imported albums.

"It's a specialized market — it's for the true audiophiles who care about collecting music," Kingsbury said.

Still, the music industry is evolving and the resurgence of interest in vinyl likely won't ever put a scratch in sales of other formats. "Record stores aren't going to go back in time," Gartenberg said. "The time (for vinyl) has come and for the most part gone.''
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Le_D replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 2:57pm
le_d
Coolness: 144850
I just passed that little survey, and honestly, it has nothing to do with electronic music. It's mostly about mp3 and cds. They don't talk about vinyl, and they present the survey as if people would buy electronic music for particular songs, as we all know a lot of people will buy it because it's mixed by a particular dj, even if they don't know the tracks.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Naughty_Mart replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 3:31pm
naughty_mart
Coolness: 48630
Vous sembler passer à côté du but de la recherche, vous devriez lâcher l'argument des vinyls. Je suis d'accord que oui les vinyls ont une place importante dans la musique électronique, mais de ce que j'ai compris, la recherche semble basé sur la relation entre le téléchargement de mp3 et la vente de CD, à pouvoir démontrer qu'il y a un lien directe entre le téléchargement de mp3 sur les ventes de CD et en venir ultimement à ce demander si ça vaut encore la peine de vendre des CD en magasin.

En fait c'est ce que j'ai compris, j'ai p-e tort, mais ça semble être ça.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nitrous_N2O replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 3:45pm
nitrous_n2o
Coolness: 125380
Ouai je comprend mais on a le droit de s'exprimer sur les vinyles quand même !
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» SebastianPrelar replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 3:46pm
sebastianprelar
Coolness: 64745
vinyl junkie!! Word Nitrous.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nitrous_N2O replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 3:56pm
nitrous_n2o
Coolness: 125380
Word Mr. Prellard

Mistah G
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Le_D replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 5:17pm
le_d
Coolness: 144850
*pukes* now this is just gross.

My point is, this study as nothing to do with electronic music. It's more about music in general.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Amp_Up replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 5:27pm
amp_up
Coolness: 83290
Fuck! Bravo Joe!

un étudiant sérieux fait une étude sérieuse et voilà tout ce dont tu es capable !!!

... va dont scraper des topic ailleurs...

Pour ce qui est du sondage, après y avoir répondu, je crois qu'il est bien fait.
Il faut pas oublier que quand on fait un sondage c'est pour vérifier une hypothèse ou identifier une tendance. Dans les deux cas, pour ne pas se perdre en conjoncture, il faut orienter son sondage de façon objective, ...ou même se limiter un peu ;)
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Nicolas_Engourdi replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 5:28pm
nicolas_engourdi
Coolness: 35490
[My point is, this study as nothing to do with electronic music. It's more about music in general.]

Tu as raison en un sens, par contre,je m'intéresse à la relation MP3 et disque compact pour les auditeurs de musique électronique. Si j'effectue la même recheche pour l'industrie du disque en général, les données seront peut-être faussé étant donnée que le comportement du consommateurs de musique contry (exemple!)ne ressemble pas à celui du consommateur de disque compact/MP3 de musique électronique. Mais je prend note de ta réflexion. Merci!
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Le_D replied on Thu Mar 24, 2005 @ 5:55pm
le_d
Coolness: 144850
Ok, je vois ton point.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» thehemeraproject replied on Fri Mar 25, 2005 @ 9:00am
thehemeraproject
Coolness: 42705
T en marketing ?

Brule en enfer.
Recherche Sur La Musique Électronique
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