TheAlpsman wrote:
All of a sudden I can no longer play purchases from the store that I made prior to February 1st 2009 .
Sounds like you are referring to songs that have DRM on them.
When Apple first launched the iTunes Store, they sold songs in 128 Kbps file, and all of the songs had DRM on them. This was probably a sop to the record companies, who had to be dragged, kicking and screaming, into realizing that people would actually pay for downloaded music if you made it convenient for them to buy it.
Once the iTunes Store took off, the record companies weren't happy with the idea that Apple might become too powerful, relative to them. They gave Amazon permission to start selling MP3s without DRM … and then made a deal with Apple. Apple would stop charging a flat price for all songs, and would let the record companies choose between several price levels; in return, Apple would get to sell songs without DRM.
Since then, the iTunes Store has sold all music other than music videos in non-DRMed 256 Kbps AAC format.
I can play later purchase put this still equates to several hundred UK pounds worth of music. I can still access them via my iPhone 16 but that of course is nowhere near the sound that I can achieve by channeling them through my computer. I suspect that they are DRM protected and possibly advanced data protection issues are a problem but as I have purchased them that should not be an issue.
Sounds like they do have DRM, and the only way that you are going to be able to play them is by logging into the Apple Account that you used when purchasing them. It should be very easy to confirm whether they are DRMed, both by looking at the bitrate, and by looking to see whether the description of the type includes "Protected."
When Apple first made the move from DRMed music to non-DRMed music, you could buy non-DRMed upgrades for many (but not all) DRMed songs. But the upgrade offer was only for a fairly short time, and your opportunity to take advantage of it expired long, long ago.
If I buy from Amazon or Bandcamp I simply own them and they are mine to play but it appears not from Apple.
- If Apple had not dragged the record companies, kicking and screaming, into allowing the sale of downloaded music, there never would have been an Amazon MP3 Store. The record companies let Amazon sell DRM-free music because they thought that Apple might become too powerful as a retailer.
- The fact that early iTunes Store songs had DRM on them does not mean that current iTunes Store songs do!!! Apple removed DRM from iTunes Store songs starting in 2009, once the record companies let them.
- Bandcamp is a different case. They set out explicitly to be more customer-friendly than the record companies traditionally have been. You may also notice that while there are some artists that release music both using the regular record company channels and using Bandcamp, most major label music is not available on Bandcamp.