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Reply #180 posted 08/20/06 9:51pm

origmnd

RitaQoS said:

sacredwarrior said:

I really need to get a life. I'm waaaay too obsessed about Prince's business deals and Prince has successfully, if unknowingly, made me fight for a cause that even he doesn't give a shit about anymore.


I wish you'd see just how amusing you are to the observers of this thread.

Prince doesn't care about you so why should you care about him?

I love Prince's music and buy it whenever I can so long as it's legal. Like it or not, Prince's WB releases are legal. Ultimate Prince is not only legal, but morally okay to buy for the hardcore fan because Prince was happy to work with WB for it's release. I'll just say that again for you; 'Prince was happy to work with WB for it's release'. You've clearly got an issue with major record labels so it'd inevitably be best for you to steer clear of them yourself. Once you've done that, then your conscience is clear. Prince however, is quite happy to court them these days, on his own terms, which is great but he's still happy to sign with record labels.

If Prince hadn't signed contracts then we'd never have had all those albums from For You to prince and beyond. Would you rather we never had those releases?



is Prince "happy" with them? wouldnt it be more appropriate to say he's come to terms with them.

It doesnt appear he's "promoting" ultimate
in any way, just the opposite, by disappearing.
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Reply #181 posted 08/21/06 2:17am

calldapplwonde
ry83

sosgemini said:




That is a little disturbing. Very fitting though.
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Reply #182 posted 08/21/06 3:59am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

Dayspring said:

yeah, watch what happens next... nothing. until 2013, when we'll get a Prince-released "For You" remaster... and then 2014, when we'll get a Prince-released "Prince" remaster... and then 2015, when we'll get a Prince-released "Dirty Mind" remaster... and so on. one year at a time as the 35 years expires on each album.


Except that might not even happen. Remember: Prince signed new contracts since 1978, and I wouldn't be surprised that those contracts extended that period with x years.

And then there's the corrupt US government:

http://weeklywire.com/ww/...ature.html


Four words was all it took -- buried in section 1011 of the legislation as a technical amendment: "Section 101 of Title 17, United States Code, is amended in the definition relating to work for hire in paragraph (2) by inserting 'as a sound recording' after 'audiovisual work.'" Those four words -- "as a sound recording" -- look harmless enough, but in reality, they did as much to drastically alter the music world as any four words since, "We signed Britney Spears."

[...]

"Works for hire" are a special category of U.S. copyright law exempt from the common wisdom rule that the author of a work is the owner of its copyright. If you write something, say a short story or maybe a poem, you own the copyright on it unless -- and this is the important part -- that work is done as a "work for hire," in which case someone else owns the copyright and is therefore entitled to all profits generated from it.

[...]

There are two classifications of "works for hire" as delineated by the 1976 Copyright Act. The first are those made by employees in the normal course of work. If you show up to a job where somebody tells you what to do and when to do it, and for that you're rewarded with a paycheck, then your work product is classified as a work for hire and you don't own the copyright on it. Instead, it automatically becomes copyrighted in the name of the company. In other words, if you're a full-time employee of Microsoft and write some code for their software, Microsoft, not you, owns the copyright on that code. Simple.

The second type of work for hire is a bit more complex, and involves independent contractors -- such as musicians. For independent contractors to create works for hire, two criteria must both be met.

[...]

The first criterion is that the work has to fit within one of the nine specific categories outlined in section 101 of Title 17. Prior to the passage of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act, the categories were: a work specially commissioned for use (1) as a contribution to a collective work; (2) as a part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work; (3) as a translation; (4) as a supplementary work; (5) as a compilation; (6) as an instructional text; (7) as a test; (8) as answer material for a test; or (9) as an atlas.

Now if you're a cartographer and you made an atlas, that would qualify as a work for hire, because "as an atlas" is one of the nine categories. But that's only half of the equation; the atlas in question is still not a work for hire until a second criterion is also met. The other proviso states that there must be a written agreement signed by employer and employee stating that the work in question is a "work for hire." If you have that contract and you have the atlas, then you've got yourself a work for hire.

[...]

What the aforementioned amendment to the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act did, then, was add "sound recording" to the list of nine specific types of works (bringing the total to 10). Big deal, right? Yes. It's a very big deal. Huge even.

[...]

You see, the addition of those four words potentially prevents recording artists from recapturing the rights to their master recordings after the initial copyright period ends. What does that mean? Well, when you sign with a major label, or an indie, or anybody for that matter, you record some songs then turn over the master recording to the label. And the master is just the thing itself -- the completed, engineered, produced, final recording you give to the record company so they can put it onto CD and distribute it for the world to buy.

Almost without exception, artists assign ownership of the copyright on those masters to their record company. The label then controls said recordings and decides how to exploit them for profit. When the initial copyright period ends, which by law is after 35 years, the artist can then recapture those rights. Or at least they could prior to "as a sound recording" being amended to the copyright law.

[...]

The offending clause was inserted into the legislation at the request of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which unfortunately wasn't alerting people to what they were doing. In fact, even members of the congressional subcommittee from which the bill came were completely unaware that such language was even in the legislation.

[...]

Upon its discovery, an uproar rose from the recording community. A number of marquee artists like Sheryl Crow, Steve Earle, R.E.M., Beastie Boys, Shawn Colvin, Paul Simon, and the Black Crowes, among some 40-odd others, formed the ingeniously named Artists' Coalition and took to Capitol Hill.


BTW Guess which "artists' rights proponent" didn't get involved?


Jay Cooper, who serves as the attorney for the Artists' Coalition and has negotiated hundreds of recording contracts for the likes of Joni Mitchell, Sheryl Crow, and Etta James, disagrees. By his reckoning, it's not a simple matter of a difference of opinion.

"Prior to this," explains Cooper, "if the record company wanted to claim that a sound recording was a work for hire, they would have to prove that it came under one of those nine categories. And by the way, there have been three different cases decided by three different courts over the past number of years that all said sound recordings were not works for hire. So it couldn't be a clarification. There was no possibility of it being a clarification. It was a definite change in the law."

In fact, almost all recording contracts contain language saying something to the effect of: "This is a work for hire, however, if it's determined that this is not a work for hire, then you the artist do hereby assign your copyright to the record company." Of course such language only fulfills one of the two criteria for determining a work for hire -- that of the contract -- but now that "sound recording" has been added to the list of nine categories of criteria No.2, then it's a no-brainer: Joe Rock Star ain't getting his masters back. Ever. Worse, simply assigning rights to the record company is very different from giving them the masters as a "work for hire."

"Even when you assign your copyright for ever and ever," says Cooper, "you still retain the recapture rights by law."

If rights are assigned to the record company, then at the conclusion of 35 years, when an artist notifies the record label that they intend to recapture those rights, the scenario is a little different. The record company can still claim the recordings in question are a work for hire since they most likely have a contract stating this, and what's being negotiated is a "sound recording" and therefore fulfills the two criteria of works for hire.

[...]

Maybe the better question is why do this now? Well, one answer might be that 2003 isn't too far off and that's the magical year in which artists can begin notifying labels they intend to recapture the rights to their masters. See, prior to 1972, sound recordings were not copyright protected. Then Congress passed the Copyright Act of 1976, which changed that. Unfortunately, the effective date of that legislation wasn't until 1978; add 35 years to '78 and you get 2013. Missed it by a decade, right? Wrong. Subtract 10 years because an artist can notify his or her intent to recapture rights up to 10 years before the end of the assignment period, and that gets you to the year 2003.

[...]

Artists with enough clout who have been able to swing ownership of their masters include Metallica, Dave Matthews, and R.E.M. The list isn't much longer than that. As local singer-songwriter and Sony signee Bruce Robison quips, "You can count them on half of one hand." Almost.


FYI: R.E.M. did this in the mid-1990s, and they were signed to a WEA-company.
[Edited 8/21/06 4:12am]
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #183 posted 08/21/06 8:08am

Lospigg

avatar

This has been available for a while in FNAC stores in Spain.
It is a good album especially good to have the old vinyl stuff remastered.

WTG Warners, more please.
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Reply #184 posted 08/21/06 8:14am

Graycap23

This collection can NOT be remastered.
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Reply #185 posted 08/21/06 9:21am

JediMaster

avatar

Graycap23 said:

This collection can NOT be remastered.



...and yet it is.
jedi

Do not hurry yourself in your spirit to become offended, for the taking of offense is what rests in the bosom of the stupid ones. (Ecclesiastes 7:9)
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Reply #186 posted 08/21/06 9:25am

Graycap23

JediMaster said:

Graycap23 said:

This collection can NOT be remastered.



...and yet it is.


From the ORGINAL master tapes? I think NOT.
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Reply #187 posted 08/21/06 9:47am

JediMaster

avatar

Graycap23 said:

JediMaster said:




...and yet it is.


From the ORGINAL master tapes? I think NOT.


Oh, that's right. Prince personally tells you these things. I forgot that you know more than anyone else on this site.

rolleyes
jedi

Do not hurry yourself in your spirit to become offended, for the taking of offense is what rests in the bosom of the stupid ones. (Ecclesiastes 7:9)
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Reply #188 posted 08/21/06 10:57am

dseann

I BOUGHT all the original copies from Warner Bros. when they came out originally, I don't need to be giving any more of my money to them at this point in time.
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Reply #189 posted 08/21/06 10:59am

dseann

deebee said:

So, for those of us who haven't been keeping score - what's the deal with the two different track listings? I've seen these two different versions:

This one.....

Disc 1:
* Purple Medley
* I Wanna Be Your Lover
* Uptown
* Controversy
* 1999
* Little Red Corvette (Dance Mix)
* Let's Go Crazy (Special Dance Mix)
* Erotic City (12
* Purple Rain
* When Doves Cry
* I Would Die 4 U
* Pop Life
* She's Always in My Hair (12
* Raspberry Beret (12

Disc 2:
* Kiss (Extended Version)
* Sign 'O' The Times
* U Got the Look (Long Look)
* I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man
* Hot Thing (Extended Remix)
* Gett Off
* Money Don't Matter 2 Night
* Cream (N.P.G. MIx)
* 7 (Acoustic Version)
* Sexy Mutha
* Nothing Compares 2 U
* My Name Is Prince


...and this one...

Disc 1
1. I Wanna Be Your Lover
2. Uptown
3. Controversy
4. 1999
5. Delirious
6. When Doves Cry
7. I Would Die 4 U
8. Purple Rain
9. Sign O' The Times
10. I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man
11. Alphabet St.
12. Diamonds And Pearls
13. Gett Off
14. Money Don't Matter 2 Night
15. 7
16. Nothing Compares 2 U
17. My Name Is Prince

Disc 2
1. Let's Go Crazy
2. Little Red Corvette
3. Let's Work
4. Pop Life
5. She's Always In My Hair
6. Raspberry Beret
7. U Got The Look
8. Kiss
9. Hot Thing
10. Thieves In The Temple
11. Cream


Is the first version, with all the remixes, etc, basically cancelled now?
mad



I don't see "Mountains (Extended Version)", have everything else as well as the song I don't see.
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Reply #190 posted 08/21/06 11:07am

klaatu

avatar

JediMaster said:

Graycap23 said:



From the ORGINAL master tapes? I think NOT.


Oh, that's right. Prince personally tells you these things. I forgot that you know more than anyone else on this site.

rolleyes


The sound is much better than the versions I got for sure. I don't know if the master tapes were the source of the remasters but I can hear a distinct vinyl crack at the beginning of the "Long Look" version of "U Got The Look"... Also , I feel the sound quality is much better when comes to the remixes.
"Goodness will guide us when love is inside of us... The Force will be with you, always"
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Reply #191 posted 08/21/06 11:12am

SlamGlam

avatar


I don't see "Mountains (Extended Version)", have everything else as well as the song I don't see


yeah it was left off...they need at least another cd (if not 2) of them...
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Reply #192 posted 08/21/06 11:29am

dseann

SlamGlam said:


I don't see "Mountains (Extended Version)", have everything else as well as the song I don't see


yeah it was left off...they need at least another cd (if not 2) of them...



Prince should let the fans put together a "Best of Prince" I think even he would be amazed. I'm sick of the same stuff under being released as "best".
They're just the most popular.
[Edited 8/21/06 11:30am]
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Reply #193 posted 08/21/06 11:37am

Persian

Glad this finally came .... shame they couldnt have added the few remaining 'previously un-released on CD tracks'
but hey-ho some is better than none.
------------------------------
"The Earth is but one country and mankind it's citizens"
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Reply #194 posted 08/21/06 11:44am

Graycap23

JediMaster said:

Graycap23 said:



From the ORGINAL master tapes? I think NOT.


Oh, that's right. Prince personally tells you these things. I forgot that you know more than anyone else on this site.

rolleyes



Get over IT.
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Reply #195 posted 08/21/06 12:04pm

JediMaster

avatar

Graycap23 said:

JediMaster said:



Oh, that's right. Prince personally tells you these things. I forgot that you know more than anyone else on this site.

rolleyes



Get over IT.


Get over what? That you always act like you know insider information, but then can't back it up? Nothing to get over.
jedi

Do not hurry yourself in your spirit to become offended, for the taking of offense is what rests in the bosom of the stupid ones. (Ecclesiastes 7:9)
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Reply #196 posted 08/21/06 12:29pm

Graycap23

JediMaster said:

Graycap23 said:




Get over IT.


Get over what? That you always act like you know insider information, but then can't back it up? Nothing to get over.


This has NOTHING 2 do with insider info. Just listen 2 the tracks.
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Reply #197 posted 08/21/06 1:41pm

Rico

avatar

I just got my CD from Amazon this morning and am listening to CD 2 as I'm typing this.

Damn these songs are amazing. Prince had extended versions down to a fine art back then.

Also find it amazing that some songs going back more than 20 years sound fresher than anything he's done in the last 10 (especially the Let's Work dance mix!).
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Reply #198 posted 08/21/06 5:04pm

squirrelgrease

avatar

Folks.

The Ultimate set has only been digitally remastered from previously combined 2-channel stereo mixes. The sound will be an improvement from previous CDs, but not as good as the much needed multi-track analog to digital CDs that we may never see.

Vinyl still wins this round.
If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
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Reply #199 posted 08/21/06 5:24pm

kinaldo

avatar

After listening to Ultimate a few times I've a new-found appreciatation for the extended versions of Let's Go Crazy, LRC, and Let's Work. Only one word to describe them; genius.
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Reply #200 posted 08/21/06 6:20pm

Graycap23

squirrelgrease said:

Folks.

The Ultimate set has only been digitally remastered from previously combined 2-channel stereo mixes. The sound will be an improvement from previous CDs, but not as good as the much needed multi-track analog to digital CDs that we may never see.

Vinyl still wins this round.


Thank u. This set was NOT remastered from the ORIGINAL multitracked tapes.
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Reply #201 posted 08/21/06 9:02pm

Dayspring

avatar

Graycap23 said:

squirrelgrease said:

Folks.

The Ultimate set has only been digitally remastered from previously combined 2-channel stereo mixes. The sound will be an improvement from previous CDs, but not as good as the much needed multi-track analog to digital CDs that we may never see.

Vinyl still wins this round.


Thank u. This set was NOT remastered from the ORIGINAL multitracked tapes.


I couldn't care less if they were remastered or not. I'd just like to have them on CD.
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Reply #202 posted 08/21/06 11:34pm

oldpurple

avatar

hi ho silver

dont know if this has already been posted if it has confused

http://www.hmv.co.uk/hmvw...sku=484279



well sorry sad
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Reply #203 posted 08/21/06 11:55pm

slimongi

Graycap23 said:

squirrelgrease said:

Folks.

The Ultimate set has only been digitally remastered from previously combined 2-channel stereo mixes. The sound will be an improvement from previous CDs, but not as good as the much needed multi-track analog to digital CDs that we may never see.

Vinyl still wins this round.


Thank u. This set was NOT remastered from the ORIGINAL multitracked tapes.



....so we can say 100 for sure that WB did not remaster the Ultimate project from original sources....because prince did not allow WB to do it.....so I GUESS there not will be in the FUTURE any interresting project about the Back catalogue remastering(+Bonus) sad
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Reply #204 posted 08/22/06 3:48am

WatershipBrake
y

avatar

Let's not forget that Prince is ever so slightly bonkers these days, what with tracks he doesn't do live or has since disowned.

He's not likely to authorise full on remasters from source of his stuff if he wants songs like Sexy MF and Darling Nikki etc. etc. to disappear.

I'd love dearly for him to get the remasters doen properly, I just don't think he's willing to do it.

All we can hope is that WB do some more decent remastering like they have done on Ultimate and release some more stuff - especially the rarer 12" and extended mixes.

What is WB positition with regards to re-releases? Can they do their own remastering ans re-release the albums? If so, why haven't they? I can only assume that Prince has final say so on their releases.
"The time frame of 5.6 seconds established by the Zapruder film left no possibility of a fourth shot from Oswald's rifle..."
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Reply #205 posted 08/22/06 4:13am

SoulAlive

interesting thread lol
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Reply #206 posted 08/22/06 5:28am

zrzrzrzr

avatar

You guys don't even understand the terms "remastered" and "remixed." How do you expect to be taken seriously when you talk out your ass? biggrin
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]
"The worst computer virus of all is downloadable stupidity." - Andrew Vachss
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Reply #207 posted 08/22/06 5:28am

Abrazo

sacredwarrior said:

Abrazo said:


Your reasoning that these are "fraudulent contracts" is based on the fact that record companies offer artists an ADVANCE PAYMENT. With that advance, you say, they "bribe" the artist into a "employer - employee" relationship in which the record company has full control over everything.

Now, would it be a good idea for artists to stop accepting those advance payments?



thumbs up!


Well, then maybe THAT should be the priority for artists that want to control their work.

Especially for a major artist like mr. "no 1 in the bank" Nelson, who really doesn't need advances because he has enough money of his own to finance the recording sessions and the production of his cd's. He merely needs a distribution agreement.

thumbs up! same goes for any artist who can record their own music. it aint that hard these days with homestudios on the up'n'up.


Exactly, but how many artists do you see recording in their homestudio and then releasing it on the net, without the help, or money of any record company?

It's gotta be that fame and money why they keep falling for the "bribe"... don't ya think?


Following your logic, once artists refuse these advance payments the record companies can no longer "bribe" them into accepting the other terms of the contract such as transfer of ownership of copyright, low royalty percentages for the artists and long term exclusive recording agreements.

mm. the 'bribe' is a 'psychological swindle', which blindsides the artist to the truth of their position as Boss.

Prince only bitched and moaned about his situation becuz he'd been blindsided, so he was technically still playing 'inside the box of the illusion' feeling inferior and powerless, sucked into the Bribe without knowing it. If he'd been able to see he'd been bribed, it woulda been case closed years ago.



I am not sure how many, but Prince signed several contracts with WB from 1978 to 1991 and all of them were most likely the same in terms of copyright ownership. His contracts probably all state that his recordings are "works for hire" and, in case that they don't fall under the statutory definition of a work for hire, Prince has assigned, sold and transfered all his rights comprised under copyright in those recordings to WB for a period of at least 35 years.

He signed clauses like that SEVERAL times and many years AFTER he made it big he should have gotten wiser. So, it seems to me that the "bribe" is actually better described as the "temptation".

Sadly this 'dayspring dude' doesnt understand the logic behind this. Investors and Advisors dont own what you create simply cuz they finance a project and get paid back for it, plus profits. Record Companies dont 'contract' anyone. They only think they do cuz they believe their own illusion,- that Bribery is somehow legal and therefore makes them Boss. lol. er... nope.


That's all cool metaphysical Prince talk and stuff and all, but in the legal reality you can sell your rights with a contract. That's what Prince did, several times, knowing full well he would lose control over his recordings.

Even buying Publishing Rights is a Hoax, cuz no one can buy their way into the writing of a song, which they didnt write. Record Companies and Publishers have no legitimate claim to make publishing royalties from something they didnt write. its called THEFT.


Not really when the author freely and happily signs over his rights to the company. Then those rights to that piece of music are owned by the company.

Sure, you are right that nobody can really ever "own" a song - because after all - a work of art is not physical and therefore can not be "owned"as such. But that's why they invented copyright and the fact is that a copyright to a work can be sold.


and easily done once u got ur artist believing ur entitled to a chunk of those profits. Not So. Just cuz they put their terms on paper in the form of a contract to make it look legal - doesnt make it Legal. Its still Theft via psychological blindsiding


Can you still speak of psychological blindsiding when even experienced artists - that have plenty of experience and millions to spend - still get trapped in it?

Maybe its time for them to get educated on what music actually IS and where it really comes from. Lets see if their wallets can buy the Truth.


Good idea, perhabs. But I think it would be a better idea for artists to get educated on what copyrights and contracts really are and how they can learn to say NO to the "bribe".



--
[Edited 8/22/06 5:39am]
You are not my "friend" because you threaten my security.
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Reply #208 posted 08/22/06 6:25am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

JediMaster said:

Graycap23 said:



From the ORGINAL master tapes? I think NOT.


Oh, that's right. Prince personally tells you these things. I forgot that you know more than anyone else on this site.

rolleyes


No, it is well-known that WB only has the 2-track mixdowns, NOT the original multi-track tapes. Any decent remaster job requires access to those tapes and preferably involvement of the original producer, engineers etc., but I can't see that happening anytime soon.

So until that time I'd happily settle for remasters of the mixdowns. Just compare the SOTT tracks on the Girl 6 soundtrack to the ones on the SOTT CD.

Example of a great remastering job: http://www.bobdylan.com/remasters/

Legacy's producers, engineers and tape researchers have done an exemplary job of tracking down the masters, restoring and in some cases expanding album artwork, and most of all capturing the recordings in all their chromatic glory.
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #209 posted 08/22/06 6:35am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

Abrazo said:

Good idea, perhabs. But I think it would be a better idea for artists to get educated on what copyrights and contracts really are and how they can learn to say NO to the "bribe".


It won't happen. Record companies are too powerful. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah "made it" without their help (if you ignore the overseas distribution deals), but how much did they sell?

I'm sorry, but to have an impact you need that powerful machine behind you, you need the expertise and the money to promote your music, to tour etcetera.

Recently some guy got popular in Europe because his music was used in an ad. Turns out he's at a small company, and when it became a hit they couldn't press new CDs fast enough, so now they're missing out on lotsa money because when they will be able to get their CDs pressed and shipped to stores they're way too late.

Record companies will force new artists to accept advances (and thus tying the artists to them) unless those artists have some leverage and a bidding war is going on, like with The Strokes a couple of years ago.
© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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