8. He Won't Put His Music on iTunes Until …

After the Beatles released their music to the digital retailer, Garth Brooks was left as just about the last man standing who won't allow access to his catalog. He doesn't like the single sale format and wants iTunes to sell his albums as they were recorded, in their entirety."Let's take 'No Fences,'" Brooks says. "For us, that has 'Friends in Low Places and '(The) Thunder Rolls' on it. But it also has a song called 'Wolves' on it that's way too not commercial for radio but changes people's lives when they hear it. Well, I think that's important too. So the whole thing comes out as a piece, I want as a piece." Price point is another issue, as Brooks doesn't want to be told how much to charge for his music.

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