I love the way they are deciding for the consumer, what it is WE are listening to, and paying for, and how they are characterizing this junk.
What makes you think they are deciding for the consumer? Even if they're saying "Go out and buy this, it's good!" that's really no different from any other form of advertising.
Would it make you happier if it got some negative reviews?
How are they deciding what you pay for? In the end, aren't you the person who decides to go to your favorite music outlet and buy the CD or not?
And why are you calling it junk? Have you even heard it?
All they are really doing is remixing (read: constructing), stuff that's already been released before, and putting it in a new package. The original music isn't enough to sell, so they feel they have to make things up!
Remix doesn't necessarily mean constructing. Do you always use flat equalization, or do you boost the bass a bit, or tweak the high frequencies?
Sure, this material has been released before. But it was produced by Phil Spector, and would the Beatles have gone to him by themselves? Maybe the original music doesn't sell because I can listen to the single-versions of some of the material on
Past Masters - Volume 2 or I can listen to an over-produced version on the original
Let It Be. Now I'm goinng to have an option of listening to all the material as it was most likely intended.
In this case, "Let It Be Naked", from what I have read about listener impression of the samples, they have re-constructed songs, sometimes with other parts from other recordings, and made another version of the song, that was NEVER performed in the first place ! I think this can be called in this instance, making an out-fake. This is stuff usually relegated to bootleggers...their sworn enemy.
Now I thought a bootlegger was a person who snuck a recorder into a concert and then sold his recording. Now, I'm aware of fan-remixed versions of released material (e.g. Luke's
Live at Leeds mix), but in either case, "bootleg" implies "unofficial" if not "illegal." Since
LIB...N is an official release from Apple, they can do pretty much what they want with it.
I can understand your disappointment with material being advertised as "natural" being mixed together from multiple sources. However, that practice in general isn't really that unusual. But if your big beef is with the fact that it's being advertised as being "how it was intended" I don't see any validity to that.