Thursday 13 October 2011

Will the last recording musician to leave, please turn out the lights

I haven't blogged for a while and have been quite busy with various Cosmograf stuff, interviews press etc. for WAHDID. The album has been very well received by the critics and more importantly prog fans so far and I've been really pleased with the feedback especially some of the European reviews which despite the language difference seem to have nailed the true essence and meaning of the album in a nutshell.

On a less positive note, I was doing my usual tour around Google this morning, searching for Cosmograf related links, and found the album is now littered over just about every single illegal music download site on the internet. I did wonder why CD sales from the website had come to a standstill in the last couple of days and now I know why. The irony of this isn't lost on me, bearing in mind that I have recently been seen on Facebook arguing that download culture may not be all bad for new musicians. Sadly it's looking pretty bad from where I'm standing now, and I may have to concede the point. Time will tell what impact it has on the record company sales long term, but at this stage, it's helping to justify my decision in signing to a record company.

To those of you that actually put your hand in your pocket and bought the CD I truly thank you. Your generosity and moral fortitude means that I actually just about scraped enough to recover the recording costs, which means there's a good chance I can come to terms with writing off financially, the ridiculous amount of time taken to write and record the album. This means there's a good chance there will be another album arriving in the future.

How anybody does this for a living is beyond me but you certainly have my utmost respect. Let's hope there are enough recording musicians left in this genre who can afford to keep making the music. Sadly, I fear many yet, will fall by the wayside.