and here's another copy currently on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Tx57wB8Kac
The resolution choices if watching via Flash stop at 360p (instead of 480p as in the link in the text above) but the picture is nevertheless a little sharper because it hasn't been cropped.
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I appreciate that the documentary didn't romanticize the LP but instead offered tangible proof that many iconic bands wouldn't have existed without the long-playing format.
We also learned what exactly is meant by "formulaic" rock and why it came to be. No surprise that singles then made a comeback (I don't actually think they'd ever left ...) but in the form of music videos.
I never "left" LPs or albums but freely admit to sitting for long periods of time in front of MTV, watching it just as someone might sit and listen to the radio. Even when the same videos would appear again and again we didn't care. For a while it was "the" way to experience a hit song, even if you owned a copy of the song, especially if you were in high school '82-'84. That was easily and legitimately my generation's "Elvis/Beatles on Ed Sullivan" and yes you'd talk about the videos later at school.
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Today I'd say YouTube serves the function MTV once did. Record label DMCA takedowns of videos or songs are haphazard at best; it's a prime way to find and hear something first or provide a quick reference for an oldie.
Think I'm kidding? I sometimes do a photobooth gig at a local college. For music at these parties the kids play YouTube playlists from laptops. Someone at the party wants to pick a song? Another browser tab or even a second laptop peruses YouTube and the next song is added to the playlist via the same logged-in account. Using a projector aimed at a wall as the monitor aids the group. Add a simple mixer and a mic and now you have karaoke.
Not even CDs or a hard disk full of MP3s can compete with YouTube. When they finally getting around to monetizing it better (and they will, beyond just the iTunes/Amazon links to songs) I think you'll see more and higher-quality videos appear there as well. (Either that or they'll dry up and become 30 second previews ...)