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View Full Version : Brilliant Letter on TheRegister



Barbarossa
12-13-2006, 04:06 PM
Dear Record Industry,

For the gajillionth time.

You take away copyright from musicians the minute they sign. That is what musicians are signing, a document giving you the rights to their music. "Rights holders" are not musicians. Real musicians don't even see music as "property" they see it as an essential part of their personal self expression. You exploit that. I hate you for it.

People actually tell me that "stealing mp3s hurts the artists community". Congratulations on the success of your poisonous propaganda. It's strange how they never tell me "clueless execs bury the best music and greenlight the worst".

You do not represent artists, you represent shareholders. When artists stop being wildly profitable, you drop them. You don't "protect" them. You drop them. You prefer to make Beatles box sets. So stop freaking lying about it and pretending you are some kind of Happy Music Friends Club where Art Comes First!!!

In fact, fuck you, you are a stain on the planet, you decrease everybody's quality of life and you stifle the expression of truly heartfelt emotions and ideas. Parasites. Leeches. Assholes. Fucktards. You don't know how to make music, you don't care about music, you don't care about artists, you don't even know what real music feels like. Shove your full page advert up your arse you despicable lazy crunts.

You're lucky I live in Lithuania where I didn't have to see your filthy lies in print, and where copyright receives as much respect as the Presidency, i.e. none.

Sincerely, Mark Splinter.



This expresses exactly how I feel on the matter :)


Full article here:

http://www.theregister.com/2006/12/12/letters_1212/

Hairbautt
12-14-2006, 02:36 AM
Not too shaby, but do you think they care? Nah...

Skiz
12-14-2006, 02:40 AM
I don't blame the RIAA for trying to protect their business one bit. I do think that they have filed some of the silliest lawsuits ever though.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 09:38 AM
They're facing extinction and they know it.

The whole purpose of a record company is to distribute music to the masses.

With the advent of the internet, artists can distribute their own music, and they can target particular types of music at a particular audience. It's just down to marketing and word of mouth.

There's much more flexibility, and much more choice, and no longer are artists shackled by the need to create music that appeals to a mass audience, so that it will sell well.

Record companies are obsolete, and they know it. In 20 years time, there won't be any more record companies. I just hope the legacy they leave us isn't a load of ridiculous laws regarding copyright :dry:

Skiz
12-14-2006, 12:39 PM
The whole purpose of a record company is to distribute music to the masses in order to make a profit.

Fixed.

thewizeard
12-14-2006, 01:15 PM
All said and done... I miss my scratched vinyls and without those record companies... I wouldn't have had them to miss...

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 01:21 PM
Yeah, I'm not saying record companies never had a purpose, before the internet, but now they are obsolete.

Hairbautt
12-14-2006, 02:34 PM
Still, it seems that if you want to be a major music artist...you'll have to go through them.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 02:39 PM
No, no you don't. Look at the Arctic Monkeys.

Hairbautt
12-14-2006, 02:45 PM
No, no you don't. Look at the Arctic Monkeys.
The who? :blink: And what about foriegn bands (distribution)...like Rammstein, although its still hard to find all their albums in the U.S.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 02:49 PM
No, not The Who. :dry:

The Arctic Monkeys.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_monkeys

Hairbautt
12-14-2006, 02:54 PM
Oh yea, from England...hard to keep up with their bands unless they're Coldplay or the Killers.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 02:59 PM
No, no you don't. Look at the Arctic Monkeys.
The who? :blink: And what about foriegn bands (distribution)...like Rammstein, although its still hard to find all their albums in the U.S.

What about them? The internet is global, you don't need record companies for online distribution.

thewizeard
12-14-2006, 03:03 PM
I have some Artic monkeys shared :).. and the complete Rammstein discograpy ( and much much more)...they can find it on my servers...

Hairbautt
12-14-2006, 03:03 PM
Hmmmm...good point, I guess sometimes I'm old fashion and would like to buy the actual CDs and albums. Still, to me, it seems hard to become popular/famous from just the intarnet world; but possible.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 03:07 PM
Hmmmm...good point, I guess sometimes I'm old fashion and would like to buy the actual CDs and albums. Still, to me, it seems hard to become popular/famous from just the intarnet world; but possible.

Don't worry, I know it's difficult to get your head round, but albums and CDs are obsolete too :whistling:

thewizeard
12-14-2006, 03:36 PM
Do you think so? They still seem very popular on file-sharing networks.

Barbarossa
12-14-2006, 03:48 PM
Old habits die hard ;)

For the artists as well as the audience.

In the future, artists will just record a song, and then "release" it to the audience, almost immediately. There isn't the need anymore to have them record a collection of 10 or more songs in one go, and then release them as a package. There isn't the need anymore to wait 2-3 years for new material to be made available.

There also isn't the need anymore to buy a whole album just because you like one or two songs on it. ;)

Skiz
12-14-2006, 03:53 PM
No, not The Who. :dry:

The Arctic Monkeys.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_monkeys


The band resisted signing to a major record label, even banning talent scouts from gigs. Eventually, the band signed to independent record label Domino Records,

The saw the light evidently.