ICYMI: Napster Died. The Hunger It Created Didn’t

Writer and historian Ed Conroy on what Napster actually opened up for music fans beyond the free, and why the resentment and entitlement it created have never left the way we think about paying for music.

For Ed, the real revolution wasn’t the price. It was Aladdin’s cave: live recordings, unreleased albums, European EP editions, things a music obsessive could spend a lifetime hunting and never find. Napster made them available overnight, and once that happened there was no going back regardless of what the courts decided.

Within an hour of Napster going dark, something else appeared. The hunger it created in listeners has never gone away either. Ed on why we still think of music as free even when we’re paying for it, what the return to vinyl says about what compressed digital files cost us, and why unlimited access to the entire history of recorded music hasn’t made the music being made today any better.

Topics: Napster, rare music, digital piracy, music ownership, vinyl revival

GUEST: Ed Conroy | http://retrontario.com | @retrontario

Originally aired on2026-06-18

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