Just when you thought they couldn't get any more outrageous.
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2006/02/riaa-says-ripping-cds-your-ipod-not-fair-use
this is awesome, theyre just running themselves completely into
irrelevence. you just cant get any more stupid than that!
On 10/31/07, Thor Teague [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just when you thought they couldn't get any more outrageous.
http://www.radiohypno.com/2007/10/31/episode-312-103107-guest-mix-thomas-cox/
very techno compared to my usual stuff, check it!
tom
Seems to be quite reasonable to me.
Widespread use without permission, doesn't establish a precedent -
unless a court decides this - one hasn't yet. On the other hand,
'routinely granted' is the key phrase innit?
Then to quote from the link:
'If I understand what the RIAA is saying, perfectly
What makes it not reasonable is that the RIAA has never really been
forthcoming that their product is a license, and you are paying for
rights. The physical merchandise is almost an aside.
Following this train of thought, further pursuit of [likely
outlandish] lawsuits for, for instance,
And you believe that this doom's day scenario is probable?
Ken
-Original Message-
From: Thor Teague [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 31 October 2007 14:48
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) New edict from RIAA
What makes it not reasonable is that the RIAA has never really been
Hello everyone !
A heads up regarding our do with Dj Jus Ed Move D next Saturday 10th of
November in London . There is just under 50 places left on the £10
concession list . So if you are planning on coming, then do submit your
names for that list pronto , to :
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
full
And you believe that this doom's day scenario is probable?
Well the BPI (UK's RIAA) already shut sites down for hosting mixes.
I agree with Tom, if this does go ahead then the music industry as we
know it is finished. For better or for worse. All the established big
artists are now signing
In effect, the RIAA is generating a more sophisticated piracy with every
step they take. Dramatic irony is the best kind.
jeff
Well the BPI (UK's RIAA) already shut sites down for hosting mixes.
I agree with Tom, if this does go ahead then the music industry as we
I don't know why this occurs to me after just coming into the house near
midnight after watching Control (which I thought was thrilling) but I
guess this is the sort of thing that people sometimes like to gas about on
this forum ;-)
I keep waiting around for the next exciting new form of music.
On 10/31/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I keep waiting around for the next exciting new form of music. Maybe I'm
getting old and not appreciating what's out there but I've been waiting a
while now.
there's lots of new music, it is just largely influenced by an
increasingly
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
I don't know why this occurs to me after just coming into the house near
midnight after watching Control (which I thought was thrilling) but I
guess this is the sort of thing that people sometimes like to gas about on
this forum ;-)
I keep waiting around for the
i like tom's post a lot. i'm not
my opinion is...the more music you listen to and experience in your
life, the less you can expect it to dazzle you the way it did when you
were younger. it has nothing to do with current trends. even if it's
the craziest chit you ever heard, it still won't hit you
On 10/31/07, JT Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i like tom's post a lot. i'm not
oops. i'm not ...sure what i was going to say there.
ps nebraska dL-014 and $tinkworx vext-001 out in 2 weeks...in europe...
Yeah totally agree with Tom's last paragraph here.
It's funny going to a minimal club night (ie not exciting/new) and seeing
the whole place dancing to some reason presets or something...who is making
the music now...c++ programmers?
I heard the new burial track last week (sonicsunset dave
On Nov 1, 2007, at 6:46 AM, r.g.3003 wrote:
It's funny going to a minimal club night (ie not exciting/new) and
seeing
the whole place dancing to some reason presets or something...who
is making
the music now...c++ programmers?
Hey, it takes Java and C# programmers to make music that
Francis has a good point and a good question.
This is something I've been thinking about off and on for the
last decade. My view is that the last real scene-changing thing
was jungle, and that was 1993 or thereabouts. Styles a-plenty
since then, including all that trip-hop, happy hardcore,
On 10/31/07, Fred Heutte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Each of the major genres was associated with new sonic
space created by the electric guitar, multi-track recording,
synthesizers, PCs, and so on, combined with a cultural cauldron
like New Orleans in 1948, London in 1961 and 1988, Chicago
in
yeah i'm with tom and completely disagree with both fred and francis.
to you (or, us) techno and house, or jungle, or whatever, was super
new and exciting etc when we heard it..it seemed like a radical new
sound. but that is all because of timing -- our relatively naive ears
when we were first
Punk was just a late bloomer. And as the Ramones pointed out,
it was invented to be played on transistor radios.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWHAL_q1ne8
fh
-- mail forwarded, original message follows --
To: 313@hyperreal.org
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thomas D. Cox, Jr.
Subject: Re:
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