I like the Cool Kids and I like Barack Obama so I really like this picture (from Gorilla Vs. Bear).

Watch Cool Kids Black Mags video:
Global Bass Music
I like the Cool Kids and I like Barack Obama so I really like this picture (from Gorilla Vs. Bear).

Watch Cool Kids Black Mags video:
I know word has spread fast on this one, but for those of you who’ve not heard yet, Jungle / Drum & Bass legend (and BBC host / Prototype records owner-founder) Grooverider was sentenced to a four-year prison term yesterday in the United Arab Emirates. Apparently he had a gig in Dubai, and he got caught bringing a spliff through airport security (he also had some porno DVDs with him, which are illegal in Dubai as well—this aspect of the story has gone curiously underreported). Despite being a fancy international tourist hot-spot, Dubai’s got a super-strict fundamentalist Islam-inspired penal code, and Mr. Rider ended up getting a 4 year sentence for 2.16g of weed. YIKES! He’s still got 2 weeks to appeal, but it’s looking unlikely that he’ll be spared. Consider the following examples of UAE legal proceedings:
Another British tourist (this one a Rastafarian) was arrested in Dubai this year after police used some crazy sci-fi super-sensitive screening device and found 0.003g of marijuana in the tread of his shoe. According to the BBC, 0.003g is “an amount that is invisible to the naked eye and weighs less than a grain of sugar.”
What would Snoop Dogg do?
Hopefully you’ve had a chance to check out Refusenik’s Kold Krussian DJ mix that we posted a couple weeks back. If so, you may have noticed that there are some original Refusinik rubs in the mix. One of our faves is this mashup of the Argentine cumbia band Los Palmeras‘ song Bombon Asesino with Missy Elliott’s Get Your Freak On.
Missy’s sentiments are particularly poignant in light of the recent ban on “freak-dancing” in Argile, TX:
Freaked Out:
Teens’ Dance Moves
Split a Texas TownSchool Leaders in Argyle
Banned Hip-Hop Grinding;
Parents Back ‘Good Kids’
Download: Refusenik; Get Your Bomb On V2.0
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OK, folks. Here’s a story to keep an eye on: Investigation into DJ piracy amid claims newcomers are stealing the show from the Sydney Morning Herald.
Wow! The music industry’s going to crack down on club DJs now. Great way to try and snub out one of your most important means of PR, music industry!
In it’s first week Radiohead’s new album In Rainbows was downloaded 1.2 million times and even though they
allowed the “buyer” to choose what they want to pay — including nothing — it has apparently fetched an average of $8 per download. That means that they’ve brought in something like $10-million, which is more than the first-week sales of their previous 3 albums combined. Add to that the fact that there is no middle-man (label, distributor) involved, and that they spent little or nothing on promotions, and you’ve got a very wealthy band. Can anyone who still claims that downloading is bad for artists please take note here?
But here’s what’s really amazing: Only the top 2 best-selling albums on the Billboard chart this past week sold over 100-thousand copies, and there’s speculation that this coming week none will even be close to triple-digit sales. Radiohead’s album just completely blows theses sales numbers out of the water.
Meanwhile the RIAA continued to spend energy attacking universities and their
students with a fresh round of pre-litigation letters this past week. If only they spent those resources doing research to keep up with current trends and developing their own new distribution models. Apparently the RIAA doesn’t find it embarrassing to keep spending lots of money suing college kids who enjoy music, while the world is passing them by and the bands that they supposedly represent detach themselves and come up with their own brilliant business models for selling downloads.
But wait, there’s more! Now internet service providers are getting into the act. It’s been reported that Comcast is
interfering with users who attempt to share media files over broadband connections. This is presumably to try and stop file-sharing networks like torrents — even though there are many legit/legal uses for such technologies. Again, it’s a waste of energy. File sharing will continue to grow as new technologies emerge, and users will switch to service providers who let them use the internets in whichever way they like. Businesses should spend their resources getting ahead of the curve; figuring out how to take advantage of these technologies to sell media.
There’s a discussion of alternate music-biz models in the book The Future of Music, and one of the best
ideas is to create a small fee for media downloads, added to a user’s monthly bill for internet service. A huge pool of money would be built up with less than a dollar a month on the bill of each user. It’s not hard to figure out what’s being downloaded, and how much, using technologies that already exist and that data can be used to determine what artists should be paid for their works. Canada looks set to implement something similar soon, though it will only be on legal downloads. The better plan would be to allow people to continue downloading for free. At least it would feel that way because the fee on their monthly bill would be virtually unnoticeable.
Related: Defending The Pig – Oink Croak/rupture writes an enlightened article about file-sharing website Oink which was just shut down by authorities.
Update: Sure enough; no CD sold more than 77-thousand copies this past week.
Update: UK Charts Company to recognise album sales on USB Flash disks
I downloaded the new Radiohead album — for free! As many of you have probably heard, they decided to “sell” their new album only through their website; no label involved. I say “sell” because you can choose what price you’d like to pay, including $0.00. I chose to “purchase” the album at the very lowest of prices, just to make sure that I could believe my ears, and yes, it turns out that you can “buy” the album for nada. It also turns out, in classic Radiohead form, the album is quite good so I went back to the site and actually purchased it.
This is an exciting music-biz model that shows just how powerful the new world of digital distribution can be. Apparently they’ve already “sold” something like 1.2 million copies of the album in less than a week. I’m really curious to hear what kind of actual money that translates to. I have a feeling it’s going to be huge.
In order for businesses to stay on top of their game they have to be limber and change with the trends. Instead the music industry has been sitting on its fat ass and sicking it’s attack dog the RIAA on regular working folks and college students. Those in the industry who don’t smell the winds of change deserve to lose market share to more nimble models.
Perhaps the lyrics to House of Cards — one of the tracks on the album — say it best:
Forget about your house of cards
And I’ll do mine
Forget about your house of cards
And I’ll do mineFall off the table,
And get swept underDenial, denial
Denial, denial
Your ears should be burning
Denial, denial
Your ears should be burning
Denial, denial
Wow! I can’t believe this is happening again. Another artist/student has been arrested in Boston. This time just for wearing a piece of circuit-board-art she made.
While it was probably not the best idea to walk into Logan airport with the circuit board mounted to her chest, it’s also sad that we live in a society that’s so up it’s own ass and frightened, that kids can’t be kids. Bummer!
Do a search for this story at Google and almost every headline contains the words “fake bomb.” After reading a few of the articles I’ve come to the conclusion that it wasn’t a fake bomb but a piece of wearable-art. Apparently the journalists haven’t drawn the same conclusion. Guess it wouldn’t sell news if the headline was “M.I.T. Student Arrested at Gunpoint for Wearable-Art.” “Fake Bomb” stirs more emotion.
An article at the M.I.T. newspaper’s website is the only one that I found with a proper headline.
Well, Star Simpson will be put through the mill now, but if our friend Peter Berdovski’s experience post-Moonibomber scare is any indication, she may also become an underground super-star.
Update: Great article at Boingboing
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