Uh, just for perspective purposes...
I personally know a guy that, near the beginning of the download craze, managed to find an umbrella deal that gave him free access to about a dozen different sites (napster, etc.). The agreement was a one-time fee of $1.00, and was a lifetime agreement.
You read that correctly. One buck, one time, downloads forever.
I forget how many he actually has at this point: 250 thousand, maybe closer to 400 thousand downloads. Album upon album, anything you could imagine, tons of stuff that he himself has never listened to.
I know what you're thinking, but it was a legitimate agreement (as far as I know), and the guy never uses this "database" of music for professional purposes (i.e., he's not a pro DJ).
Still, how much do you think that is, per song? $1 divided by 250, 000 downloads? I wonder how many artists have gotten rich from that...haha.
Do you think he's the only one? Seriously?
And as for quality vs. quantity, please...millions of people are walking around right now, listening to recordings-the quality of which are the sound equivalent of a horse drawn carriage (in comparision to the available technology-the automobile, for instance), and they couldn't care less. Yes, there is a (vastly) small group of consumers that are always going to concern themselves with quality, but I for one, don't believe that you could survive financially based on the actions of that one miniscule little faction.
The value of music today? Zero?.
Mo. It's less than zero. Sorry guys, but the truth hurts.