David Turner of Penny Fractions joins the show to make a case against the popular narrative that Napster, led by the precocious teen tech-head Shawn Fanning, single-handedly took down the record industry in the early aughts. Turner explains that what caused the music industry bubble to burst was actually a much more complex series of factors including record labels a little too high on its own supply. Also, those $19.99 CDs prices sure didn't help.
Digital Dark Ages
Dub Economics: The Life and Times of Lee “Scratch” Perry
How MTV Changed the World
Oligopoly in the U.K. with David Turner of Penny Fractions
The Political Economy of The Grateful Dead with Jesse Jarnow
Ticketmaster Blues: The past (and future) of the Live Music Industry
BONUS: Morgan Parker talks Fugazi
Gangsta Rap and LA History with Felicia Angeja Viator
Can Fugazi help us imagine a better future for music?
Making the Mainstream: The History of Top 40 with Eric Weisbard
Twitch Trolls Metallica
Pulling Back the Veil on Posthumous Albums
Bootleggers, Hippies, and...Lawyers: How piracy remade music with Dr. Alex Sayf Cummings.
NF(t) DOOM or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Blockchain
BONUS Episode: Stephen Thomas Erlewine
“God is My Girlfriend”: Christian Rock and Niche Genres with Andrew Mall
Financialization Feeding Frenzy with Cherie Hu and David Turner
Liz Pelly on Alternative Platforms and Possible Futures
Consent Decrees
The Life and Death of The Greatest Hits Album
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