When you buy CDs from Amazon, you also get a copy of the same music as a download. I think you can also buy the downloadable version only for a discount, yet to try that. Anyway, once time I actually ended up using this, because I was in a great hurry: I needed a copy of some very uncommon classical music within a few hours, and the only options were to either download it from Amazon (the CD showed up a few days later), or to drive to the county library and borrow the CD there, and here in the Bay Area, you don't voluntary drive places during rush hour, it would be suicidal with our traffic.I've got a lot of "old" physical media and a lot of "modern" digital "purchases". But my digital "purchases" seem to be licences-to-use while the providers can be bothered, can get the content, and I stay alive.
So anyway, the downloadable copy you get from Amazon is simply a good-quality MP3, ripped with high bit rate, and no DRM at all. Very convenient, and very libertarian with the omission of DRM.
Now, I'm not claiming that this automatically means that Amazon is a good company. Nor would I claim that they are a bad company because of that "1984 on the kindle" drama. As usual, things are complex, and not black and white.
I agree. Most recent one was yesterday's mail, a CD with Schumann's two Introduction and ... for piano and orchestra. But here comes the funny thing: the moment the CD shows up in the mail, I put it into my computer to rip it and store it on disk, I run the booklet through the scanner and put it on disk, and most likely, I'll never touch the physical CD again. I'm not sure I can explain why I buy the physical copy, but I do.So I'm starting to think I should get physical copies of any favorite music, books and movies ...