I don't understand why album downloads via the likes of itunes are so expensive. As was said earlier you can download for £10.99 or buy a physical CD for £9 in a supermarket. Surely if the industry want to get rid of piracy then the price of downloads should be reduced massively. I'd pay for an album download if it was only a £3 or £4 but as it is I stick to listening to the radio and the CDs I'd bought before the MP3 era.
I have downloaded through Amazon and iTunes - I don't understand why the production of the physical media can cost less or the same as a digital download
CD's are manufactured for pence these days. Think how much you can buy blank CDs for, then imagine the discount you get when buying the sort of quantity that record companies do.
Contrary to popular belief, downloading is not a "free" distribution method. You need to pay to create and maintain your store "site", pay for the servers to run it on, the electricity to run said servers (plus the data centre costs), bandwidth from your service providor (not cheap, given the amount of data they'll be dealing with) plus covering all the usual running costs of the business.
Then you've got to pay the record companies their cut, and then you've (hopefully) got some profit left at the end, once the tax man's taken his share!
Having said all that, iTunes does appear to be shooting itself in the foot with pricing ever since it introduced it's new variable pricing scheme. It seems to mostly have varied up in price

When it first started and all tracks were 79p and all albums were £7.99, they were pretty much always cheaper than buying an actual CD!
Amazons MP3 store seems to consistently beat them on price now, and get the majority of my business as a result.
At least we have a choice, it's not been long since iTunes was the only real legal way to buy music online.
I don't see the point in going to the shop, buying a CD, to bring it home, shove it in my computer to load the music onto iTunes, and then never playing it again. I may as well just download it and cut out the middle man

I like to think I'm helping the environment out as well, saving on the amount of plastic being produced
