To demonstrate that people
still have some good taste in music, the re-release of the Beatles’ album
catalog is sending people back to record stores and other places selling CDs.
EMI Group PLC says
consumers in North America, Japan and the U.K. bought more than 2.25 million
copies of the Fab Four's re-mastered albums in the first five days after their
Sept. 9 release.
On Billboard's pop catalog
chart, the band had 16 titles in the top 50, including all 14 re-mastered CDs
and two box sets, one stereo, one mono.
The Beatles' original U.K.
studio albums were released to coincide with the sale of "The Beatles:
Rock Band" on the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii, and the ploy is working
to perfection; I will bet a good percentage of the purchasers of these CDs are
younger than age 25.
And that is great. The
generation that has been inundated with the likes of 50 Cent, Eminem, T.I. and
countless other trash acts making garbage that today is called “music” is
gravitating to music that really is music, music that says something, and music
that has withstood the generations.
Yes, I am talking like an
old fuddy duddy, but so be it. The Beatles’ music is timeless, and I am glad
that a new generation is hearing, and grooving, to this stuff.
Yes, I know they are being
introduced to it by playing a video game, but you know what, if that gets them,
then that is fine. If that is the way they get to hear music that they would
not normally hear, then I am all for it.
In fact, I am very proud,
in a personal way, because the other night, my 14-year-old son asked me to
download all of the Beatles’ LPs onto his iPod, which I already had, of course,
and I happily obliged his new-found passion for the Fab Four.
And to make sure that he
had everything, he rattled off about a dozen songs, and yes, they are now on
his iPod …
Next to 50 Cent, Eminem and T.I., but heck, you
have to start someplace.
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