support
and
But the Grammy-Award-winning rock band isn't just giving their album away for free. Oh no. They're encouraging fans to spend their money on lesser-known artists instead.
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They're hardly the first band to experiment with different models for sharing their music on the Internet.
But Wilco is one of the first high profile acts to do so for the explicit purpose of stimulating the creative economy.
I'm sure you've heard it all before that the Internet is ruining the music industry. Hell, musicians have been fighting the same battle since the advent of the phonograph. But music fans don't want hear to the same complaints over and over again, ad nauseam. They just want to listen to the music.
Wilco may have used the Internet to stick it to the man back in 2001, but now they're just one of several big-name bands using their power to stand up for the little guy.
Taylor Swift also stood up to the streaming music industry recently, speaking out against Apple Music and Spotify.
when Apple Music refused to pay for the music streamed during a user's free trial period.

Both Wilco and Swift used their positions to champion the rights of working-class musicians, each in their own respective way.
Neither is necessarily better or more "right" than the other. (The last thing I'm trying to do here is start a feud between Wilco and Taylor Swift; my wife and I already have that battle every time we get into the car.) Both just want to make sure that someone is getting paid for their music.
the money — she believes artists deserve to be paid what they're worth, on every level. (To be fair,
T-Swift and Wilco are just the latest in a long, long line of musicians who have raged against their own machine.
famously released "In Rainbows" as a pay-what-you-want album and have been very outspoken against Spotify. was famously stubborn about keeping prices low for albums and concert tickets alike. Bands like (full disclosure: I sometimes perform with them) and the aptly-named have democratized their music through free album downloads as well as open musician rosters. has made major waves with his self-released mixtapes and has used that success to turn the spotlight onto the other members of his multimedia supporting group, the Social Experiment.
And that's just a few examples from my own music library.

GIF from TayTay's "Shake It Off" music video.
What matters most, though, is that we find ways to support artists of every kind — after all, they make the stuff that makes our lives worth living.
If you believe in the importance of a strong middle class, it only makes sense that you support the creative working class. Art shouldn't be a privilege produced and enjoyed by an exclusive elite. It's a necessity

Thumbnail Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images


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