Heads up to all the music lovers out there: RealNetworks’
Rhapsody online music service opened up a new, DRM-free MP3 store, and it's giving away a free
download of any $10 album to the first 100,000 people that sign up.
It’s important to note that at the time of this writing, it appears that the
site is buckling under what I would hope to be a surge in traffic – most of my
activities on the site generally result in a lengthy timeout followed by
a black-text-on-white-background “Proxy Error”.
Earlier this afternoon – when Rhapsody was responding to requests in a
timely manner – I used the free album opportunity to consult my Amazon
wishlist and pick up Venetian Snares’ “My Downfall (Original
Soundtrack)”. The experience was unexpectedly pleasant.
Why unexpected? RealNetworks has something
of a reputation; its infamous RealPlayer is one of the most
annoying applications ever to grace the world’s PCs. The company's streaming codec is long dead; RealVideo may have seen use in the days of dial-up
but nowadays anything encoded with it nowadays tends to look and sound bad. With
Rhapsody’s MP3 store, my expectations were low: would I have to jump through
hoops with a custom client to download my music? Would my downloads be
unacceptably slow? Would I have to put up with nag offers or other assorted
crud just to get to my files?
The answer, on all fronts, is a satisfied “no”. While you certainly can download
Rhapsody’s music client, if you don’t want to then you are free to receive your
music in a ZIP file and then dump its contents wherever – drag the files from
Explorer into your music player of choice (mine’s Winamp) and go. Easy as pie!
The MP3 files I downloaded were appropriately tagged – though they classify Venetian
Snares as “Electronica/Dance” where a more specific tag such as “IDM,”
“glitchcore” or “drill’n’bass” might be appropriate – and included a small, if
serviceable, 170x170 JPEG of the album’s cover art. Downloads are also tagged
with text detailing a purchase date and transaction ID, which is stored in each
MP3’s comment field.
Unfortunately I can’t really compare my experience with Rhapsody to other,
more popular music stores. When I’m not buying CDs or vinyl records, I usually purchase music online at specialty shops like Beatport or Digital-Tunes.net.
I have a personal boycott of iTunes – don’t even have it installed, even though
I use an iPod – and I usually buy used CDs from Amazon partners or local record
stores as opposed to MP3 downloads. Rhapsody MP3’s experience was comparable to
the other stores I
do have experience with, and offering me a ZIP file was a nice touch.
The quality of my music was what one might expect for a 256 kilobit MP3, which
is to say excellent for all but the most trained of ears.
If I had any complaints – aside from its website being down as I write
this – I would have preferred MP3s encoded at 320 kilobits, which is the
maximum quality setting for standard MP3 compression. Even better: an option to
download files in a lossless format such as FLAC, which would give discerning
customers such as myself files that are equivalent to a CD. After loading my
downloads into a sound editor and creating a spectrogram (visual analysis of a
sound file) I noticed what appears to be a hard low-pass filter that cuts off
all sound above the 19-to-19.5khz range – just under the upper limit for human
hearing – but that is a minor complaint most likely having something to do with
the MP3 process itself, and irrelevant to all but the snobbiest of music
purists.
Overall, I would consider Rhapsody’s MP3 store a worthy contender in the
growing arena of DRM-free music stores. I certainly can’t recommend against
buying music at Rhapsody, especially since you get a no-strings-attached free
album for your troubles.