| Dean Gray Tuesday |
|
|
|
| Articles - Music | |
| Wednesday, 30 November 2005 | |
|
As (Boing BoingI wrote earlier this month,
"fighting mashups has nothing to do with reducing "piracy." No one who
listens to American Edit will shrug her shoulders and say, "Well, heck,
now that I've heard that, who needs to buy the Green Day album?"
Censoring this art is tantamount to saying, "This music must go because
it displeases us."
I presented this view to an EMI representative at the Creative
Economies conference in London earlier this autumn and she responded by
saying that DJ Danger Mouse had a happy ending, because they
subsequently hired him to produce lawful mashups for them (while still
maintaining legal censorship of the Grey Album).
Copyright maximalists like to contrast copyright with the old system of
patronage, when you could only make art if you could convince the Pope
or a duke or a king that your art was worthy. Patronage really
distorted creative expression, and copyright did indeed promise to
decentralize authority over what kind of art was permitted.
But the EMI rep's answer to the Grey Album is patronage. "You
must not make this art unless we permit it." If you work for one of a
few big record companies, you can use their legal apparatus to clear
the material you want to use in a mashup. Otherwise, your art is
illegal and will be censored.
I think patronage is wrong -- I agree with the maximalists
here. Let's end it. Let's share these mashups, make samples without
permission, and continue to produce art without permission from the
latter-day aristocracy of creativity." From the website: "Only 10 days after its release, the mash-up album American Edit, which
pays tribute to the acclaimed Green Day album American Idiot through
some of the best mash-up productions of 2005, was shut down reportedly
after received a cease & desist order from Green Day's label,
Warner records, despite the fact that it was released as an internet
only release with no commercial gain for the team of mash-up artists
involved. In fact, the only possible profit to be made from the release
was a plea from the creators of the album (known only by the shared
alias Dean Gray) for fans who enjoyed the creation to donate to one of
three possible charities that Green Day have been known to support.
Furthermore, the mash-up versions were such fantastic productions that
they were truly a departure from the standard Green Day performances
and would not compete for consumptive dollars.
We hope to mobilize the online Mash-Up community by organizing a
simple one-day organized event. Participants would be asked to post the
American Edit album online for 24 hours only starting on Tuesday,
December 13, at 12:00AM. Doing so is not intended to be a mass
organization of music piracy but, rather, one single display of the
consumptive power of the mash-up and home remix community in the hopes
of encouraging the labels, publishers and artists who are curious about
the mash-up community to consider giving the high quality productions
of "illegitimate" music a legitimate consideration as a promotional
avenue for all music." Link: http://gray.alt.fm/ DOWLOAD LINK: http://americanedit.org/home/ae/ |
|
| < Prev |
|---|





