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The Boston Globe OnlineBoston.com Boston Globe Online / Living | Arts / Cyberlinks
Building a musical dream with MP3

By Patti Hartigan, Globe Staff, 01/15/99

There's a revolution going on, and Brett Fasullo and Ty Rauber are true believers. That's not to say the two Allston citizens resemble revolutionaries at all. Rauber, who has a tawny ponytail and pierced eyebrow, is an intense, exceedingly mature 21-year-old Boston University student. By night, Fasullo, 28, is a member of the local band Flexie; by day, he sunlights (as opposed to moonlights) as a computer consultant.

These two believers embrace a technology called MP3, an audio-compression format that enables anyone with a computer and a little technical know-how to copy CDs into MP3 computer files and post them on the Internet. They recently launched a site called DMOD.com, where Web browsers can sample MP3 music files and buy them for $1 a track. There's nothing particularly new about this idea; MP3.com offers music for free, and goodnoise.com sells tracks for 99 cents a pop. But the DMOD player, like other commercial formats, encrypts its files, so you can't share the music with 200 of your closest friends.

The impulse behind this local venture is the age-old hope: Some day, one band is going to leap out of obscurity by distributing music on line. Musicians have been on line since the early days of the Web, but to date there hasn't been a single band that catapulted to fame via the Internet. ''That's the dream,'' Fasullo admits.

The answer to that dream just might be MP3. College students certainly adore the technology. Visit any dormitory that has high-speed Internet access and you're just as likely to hear music blaring out of a computer as out of a stereo.

Others are less than thrilled about the technology. Take a quick guess who those folks might be? Did I hear you say recording industry executives? Two points.

In December, the Recording Industry Association of America and five major record companies announced plans to develop a standard for digital distribution that would prevent illegal copying. The recording industry association routinely shuts down sites that offer free MP3 recordings by major artists.

''It's piracy,'' says Cary Sherman, senior executive vice president and general counsel for the group. ''When you had piracy on the high seas, you didn't have commerce, because no one would put their goods on ships when they knew they would be plundered.''

But the $12 billion recording industry isn't exactly trembling in the face of collegiate Captain Hooks. Even Sherman admits that the big issue here is the realignment of the music business. How do you sell and distribute music digitally and ensure that the profits go back to the label and the artist? Hollywood types had the same fears when VCRs first became popular in the '80s; they took a lawsuit to the Supreme Court to prevent VCR copying for home use. Guess what? They lost, and the film industry is doing just fine.

The move to digital distribution is undoubtedly going to happen. It's just a question of when. ''We take it as a given that at some point down the road, we're going to be irrelevant,'' says Mike Dreese, cofounder of Newbury Comics, a locally based music store chain. ''You will see a steady erosion in retail record sales.''

But as the industry sorts out the issues, the question remains: What will it mean for independent artists? Established names like the Beastie Boys and Public Enemy have defied their record labels and posted MP3 files on their Web sites. But what of the little guys, the folks who could truly benefit from global exposure?

A time-honored truism applies. No technology can replace the essence of art, that little human thing called talent. You can market bad music in any format and it still won't sell.

Most of the legal MP3 music available on line isn't all that good. There are some exceptions. Frank Black, former leader of alt-rock sensation the Pixies, is selling his terrific new album on goodnoise.com. But most of the stuff available on MP3.com is garage-quality for quirky niche markets (like one band called Celtic Elvis, which is neither.)

''For every 1,000 bands, only one is going to become a star,'' says Bob Cohn, Goodnoise chairman. ''We haven't found that band yet, but we predict it will happen.'' Goodnoise, launched last year, reported $12,400 in earnings for its first quarter. Cohn predicts profits will arrive some day, too.


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