About 20 years ago I went to the Proms, a yearly event at Albert Hall in London where a fairly eclectic selection of music
(mainly classical) is performed. That year there was the world premiere of a piece of amazing music I now know is called "Nachruf
for Strings" by a Norwegian composer ("nachruf", I am told, means "obituary" in Norwegian).
I remembered the piece a few days ago and e-mailed the Norwegian Society of Composers to see if I could learn more. In 24
hours I got a reply from a very helpful gentlemen named Thorgrim who asked another chap named Torkild who came up not only
with the correct name of the piece but also the composer's name, Arne Nordheim, and a Web site where I could purchase it!
The site for acquiring this gem is Norsk Komponist Forening, a showcase for Norwegian music that is varied and prolific. Thus it was that I found there before me, ready to be mine,
all seven minutes and 28 seconds of "Nachruf for Strings" for the princely sum of 13.50 Kroner (about $2.24).
I clicked on the "Buy" icon and got "We're sorry . . . Your PC does not seem to be configured to handle encrypted WMA files."
Allow me to translate: "We're sorry, but we're using Microsoft Digital Rights Management, which requires Internet Explorer, which you apparently aren't using so we can't help you."
They were right: I use Firefox. The requirement for IE was irritating but not a real problem. I ran up IE and found the track,
added it to my basket, and then found out they wouldn't accept charges less than 35NKr ($5.81). OK, so I found another Nordheim
composition so I was over the minimum and completed the purchase.
After downloading the tracks I tried to play them in Windows Media Player and got a warning dialog. But the dialog was in
Norwegian and, as you might guess, my Norwegian is a little, er, nonexistent. But there was a link to click on. This gave
me another warning in Norwegian.
I discovered there is a bug in Microsoft's Windows Media Player 11. The support document titled "BUG: You may be redirected to a Web page when you try to play Windows Media DRM protected content after you upgrade
to Windows Media Player 11 or to Windows Vista," and dated Feb. 7, offered a way to address the problem. So, I downloaded
a patch from Microsoft, installed it, restarted WMP, and voilá! WMP acquired the licenses and there it was, in all its glory,
the piece of music I had heard 20 years before. And it was glorious.
Comments (10)
This Week in Backspin: Nachruf for DRMBy Mark Gibbs on June 25, 2007, 11:09 pmIn Backspin this week the tale of how I hunted down a piece of music by a Norwegian composer and in the process learned, once again, that the quality of customer...
Reply | Read entire comment
Nachruf - German, not NorwegianBy Magnus Bernhardsen on June 28, 2007, 7:24 amFirst, a small correction: Nachruf is German, and not Norwegian. But I think the meaning of the word is obituary or something like that. Secondly, I hope the...
Reply | Read entire comment
Re: Nachruf - German, not NorwegianBy Mark Gibbs on June 28, 2007, 2:20 pmThanks -- as I admitted my Norwegian is non-existent and "nachruf" does indeed sounds Germanic. As for musikkonline.no my contact at the Norwegian Society of...
Reply | Read entire comment
And try getting a refundBy Howard Stewart on June 29, 2007, 9:25 amDRM is not only a pain, but it is virtually impossible to receive a refund for a purchase that does not play on your device. The vendor considers the download as...
Reply | Read entire comment
Exactly!By Mark Gibbs on June 29, 2007, 5:40 pmIt's a high-tech legal scam and even when a DRM-based is as well managed as the iTunes store it still stinks unless you work solely within their world of DRM technology...
Reply | Read entire comment
The problem is not as easy as one would thinkBy Lee Drake on July 2, 2007, 2:01 pmSure Microsoft has a few bugs here and there, but let's also remember that their DRM is much more open than Apple's. Providing DRM based content on an Apple machine...
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments