"Can the theremin market support this? I think it's kind of irrelevant these days. Put your music out there. If it's good, it will be noticed. I think that's the bottom line today." - Rich
Yeah - its a completely different world.. The internet has made it possible for (almost) anyone to share their art with a world audience, free or for fee..
The problem IMO is that the filters are gone - these filters were far from perfect, and stopped a lot of good stuff from getting through - And they were corrupt, only interested in huge profit..
But without them, there is such a mass of "art" dumped that one is going to miss most of it - the "If it's good, it will be noticed" is, I think, a bit optimistic - One still needs the marketing mechanisms in order for anyone to find you, let alone "notice" you.
I know some wonderful musicians who did their stuff mostly at festivals (there was a huge number of "unofficial" festivals near Shepton Mallet / Glastonbury, which ran in the holiday seasons, and had a few hundred people each at most) These musicians would perform and sell CD's and perhaps make a couple of grand 'profit' each season - They were paid (or got donations) for their performances, and people like me would provide sound engineering and equipment and sometimes get tips for doing so (at least we got free entry, food, drink and occasionally a really good smoke ;-)..
But the internet (and age?) has mostly wiped them out - Strangely, the only ones who are actually known now are those who 'sold out' and signed with a big label, got promoted and marketed... The others give their stuff away on the web, and people have become poorer and meaner, so donations are rare.
The internet is just too big - Perhaps what we need is some software (a bot or whatever) which can learn ones tastes (actually "listens" to the music, rather than basing selection on what is said about it), and go out trawling the web to find stuff you like.. Where's Lois AI when one needs it? ;-)
Fred.