I, too, regret that the website has been shut down,
Since I check it from time to time,
In my opinion, Musrc’s biggest feature is that it includes some extremely rare “Music Library” tracks.
However, you can't listen to these companies' music through some online distributors; you have to buy the CDs to hear it.
So, to me, they seem very scarce and rare, and they spark my curiosity.
Nowadays, many long-established “Music Library” labels have even released their albums on streaming platforms, making it easier for us to listen to them and allowing them to be easily recognized by apps.
But to me, it lacks a touch of mystery.
In the past, I thought that “Music Library” tracks weren’t included on streaming platforms and weren’t easily recognized by apps, so I found them mysterious and interesting.
So the closure of Musrc has caused us to lose a lot of rare “Music Library” tracks.
Although I know quite a few people who have collected large numbers of “Music Library CDs,”
many of the CDs in their collections are from internationally renowned companies, and we can easily listen to them on other websites,
The only exception is that many of the CDs in “Musrc” can’t be previewed online through the website. They’re quite rare, and I think they’ve reignited my passion for researching “Music Library.” We have some music whose origin we don’t yet know—maybe it’s on one of those rare CDs from Musrc, but we just can’t identify it. We’ll only be able to confirm it once we listen to it ourselves, haha.
But I’d like to digress for a moment.
Around this time last year, I donated $70 to Retro Matic and asked him to rip some albums from the “Flying Hands Production Music Library” for me. He agreed, but nearly a year has passed, and I haven’t received the ripped files or heard back from him.
Isn’t this a bit unreasonable? If he really doesn’t have time to respond, he should refund the $70 to me.