This is a fun read,  with Kot's research and interviews elevating book from just another  rant about  how stupid the major record labels are into something much more enlightening.  Don't  get me wrong; I love reading about how stupid the music industry has been,  is,  and probably will be, but by now, you need something else to turn  it into  a worthwhile full-length book.
 Kot's "something else"  is his analysis and reporting of not just how traditional recorded music   declined as an industry, but how artists responded to it. He devotes  individual  chapters to the stories of how particular artists adapted to technological  change. This does not include just dealing with file sharing and  fighting  Napster, though that is a huge part of it, but also various other  strategies in  recording and performing music as well as distributing it. Preceding  each  chapter is a snapshot of a fan and that fan's attitude towards something  like  file sharing.
 The approach allows  for a wide range of topics and musicians, though there is a heavy  emphasis on  indie/alternative rock. Even if you are not particularly interested in  the  work of an Arcade Fire  or a Death Cab for Cutie, you  can enjoy reading about  their strategies and approaches to functioning as working artists in a  digital  age. There are also profiles of bigger names like Prince and  Wilco.
 While the basics of  events such as Radiohead's  experiment with a "pay what you feel it is  worth" approach to releasing an album may seem familiar, Kot's  reporting provides detail and perspective. Then there are chapters that  shed light on less-covered topics. For example, I was familiar with the  music news/reviews site Pitchfork,  but I knew little about its origins, and  Kot makes it a compelling story in and of itself but also the basis  for a broader exploration of Internet music blogs in  general.
"Ripped" merits an easy thumbs up for music fans, both those who are familiar with how technology is changing the industry and those who have tried their best to avoid those details so they can just focus on the tunes and not the iTunes.
 "Ripped" merits an easy thumbs up for music fans, both those who are familiar with how technology is changing the industry and those who have tried their best to avoid those details so they can just focus on the tunes and not the iTunes.
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