jif wrote:
quoted 3 lines and yeah, how are we supposed to deal with the ultra-generic transformers
> and yeah, how are we supposed to deal with the ultra-generic transformers
> and stolen anime from the rephlex page, and all the stolen british
> expressions in your vocabulary? those are authorship issues too...
I, for one, am sick of this silly little pissing match.
You want to hear a story about authorship issues, here's one:
Here in the good old US of A, Levis (the jeans people) are airing three
commercials that feature hip new lifestyles.
One of the spots has a jungle dj (who's name is ed, from alabama)
playing in a hick bar, out in the middle of nowhere.
In this spot, there is a 10 second chunk of 'mutant revisited' by DJ
trace.
Just about everyone into jungle knows this song.
It was one of the biggest tracks of '96.
Nico, who wrote the track, was told about the spot when he arrived in
New York a few weeks ago. He knew nothing about it.
His first stop on the big top tour was in San Francisco, which happened
to be the home town of the ad agency that created those spots.
When got to S.F., he went to the agency and asked to see the spot. They
gave him the runaround for over a hour and then they showed him the spot
but said the ad exec in charge of that account was not in. Upon viewing
the spot, he was amazed that it was, in fact the track he wrote,
unchanged. Another hour later, he was ushered into a office and was
told by an ad exec that the music in that spot was created by a firm in
New York who does all of their music, especially for the Levis spot.
Nico was given a budget breakdown for the music, including fees for all
the musicians who 'played' on the track, including a trumpet player, a
drummer and a few others.
He told them that there were no 'live' musicians on the track, it was
all samples.
They said, 'no, those ARE the people that played the instruments.
Nico asked what the name of the track was, and the reply was, it didn't
have one, but it definitely wasn't his track...it was an 'original'
composition.
He was then promptly ushered out of the office.
Nico, being the big dork he is, had a portable dat in his pocket and
recorded the whole episode.
So he got fucked, (until he talks to his lawyer back in the uk).
The sad thing is that isn't the first time he was fucked on this track.
He said when he originally did the remix for emotif, all he got out of
it was 50 quid, trace got a starter jacket and Ed Rush got nothing.
For one of the biggest selling jungle singles of the year.
Pretty fucked up, no?
-------
The plot thickens...
Another of the Levis spots has a jungle remix of a Erica Badu track done
by a LA junglist and producer, Eric Hull, also know as 'e-sassin', the
head of a small local label called soundsphere.
Two nights ago, I told him the above story, he listened quietly and when
I was done, said, 'fuck! They did the same thing to me!'.
He said he submitted the remix to sony (or whatever label badu is on)
and they ripped it off.
He got nothing.
-------
So there you go...There really isn't any point in yelling at each other
about artist we care about, collaborating, credit and things like that.
There's a lot more evil shit going on in the world...
Word to the mothership,
brock.
np: Henry Mancini - 'Breakfast At Tiffanys' soundtrack