Has any one seen this yet?
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- KVRian
- 588 posts since 2 May, 2004 from Thunderbird 5
Free Sampling Killed by Court of Appeals
Published: Sep. 9, 2004
By Mike Darrah
On Tuesday, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati turned the playing field for digital sampling completely upside-down. The court ruled quite simply that any and all samples used must paid for, even if they sound completely different from their original. Previously, if a digital sample wasn't identifiable from it's original it was perfectly legal.
The court stated that the recent federal laws aimed at stopping piracy of recordings applied directly to digital sampling also, slapping any and all artists who use samples in their works in the face with the very laws some of them fought for.
With the new rules and current state of the industry (greed), many speculate that if this ruling existed before many classic hip-hop albums such as Paul's Boutique from the Beastie Boys would quite simply be too difficult to get proper licensing for to release.
What does this mean for the future of digitally produced music built upon sampling? One thing is for sure, under the current ruling, artistic innovation has been smothered by greed. There is one clear winner in this ruling, copyright lawyer's, as it also opens the floodgates for massive future litigation on any and all works using digital sampling.
Found it on the WinAmp site.
Jez
Published: Sep. 9, 2004
By Mike Darrah
On Tuesday, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati turned the playing field for digital sampling completely upside-down. The court ruled quite simply that any and all samples used must paid for, even if they sound completely different from their original. Previously, if a digital sample wasn't identifiable from it's original it was perfectly legal.
The court stated that the recent federal laws aimed at stopping piracy of recordings applied directly to digital sampling also, slapping any and all artists who use samples in their works in the face with the very laws some of them fought for.
With the new rules and current state of the industry (greed), many speculate that if this ruling existed before many classic hip-hop albums such as Paul's Boutique from the Beastie Boys would quite simply be too difficult to get proper licensing for to release.
What does this mean for the future of digitally produced music built upon sampling? One thing is for sure, under the current ruling, artistic innovation has been smothered by greed. There is one clear winner in this ruling, copyright lawyer's, as it also opens the floodgates for massive future litigation on any and all works using digital sampling.
Found it on the WinAmp site.
Jez
- KVRian
- 1469 posts since 18 Sep, 2004 from Suffolk, UK
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Distorted_Mastermind Distorted_Mastermind https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=62388
- KVRist
- 391 posts since 22 Mar, 2005 from Kansas City, KS
that's pretty harsh. some stuff would be hard to prove anyway and that's probably why the law was definable. that will be a pain, and it will probably leave people looking for lawsuits (cash). not eveyone has a spare brass or string section handy. more motivation to make badass plugins i guess
. it is sad. if i want to take a single note or two out of a song and play it on a synth and make a whole new progression out of it, that should be fair game. it saves broke asses like myself money i don't have to spend
Always remember that others may hate you but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself.
-Richard M. Nixon
www.myspace.com/pmf
-Richard M. Nixon
www.myspace.com/pmf
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 588 posts since 2 May, 2004 from Thunderbird 5
Yeah, I think your right. The whole thing seems un-workable, how the hell can they prove a sample which sounds completely different isn’t an original work. The next thing will be some twat trying to copy write the sine wave.Lovesign wrote:An old story, and a ruling that has not seemingly stifled musical creativity. The art wins thru every time
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- KVRist
- 85 posts since 3 Jan, 2005 from Seattle <-- HERE --> Vancouver
By the time I finish mangling a sample, I, myself, have no idea what the original source was
. Fat chance the "sample police" will ever figure it out. What a waste of Judicial time and money. This country is out-of-control, and spiralling towards fascism.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 588 posts since 2 May, 2004 from Thunderbird 5
It’s getting like that in the UK. On a quiet night you can hear der fuehrer Blair stomping up and down Downing Street in his jack boots.synthpulse wrote:This country is out-of-control, and spiralling towards fascism.
Jez
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- KVRAF
- 6596 posts since 21 Jun, 2004 from Secret Underground Hideout
whatever happened to doin it yerself? why would any1 use sampled parts? if ya make music with other's bits (not virtual instruments or virtual vocalists) or pre-made loops, are you really a musician?
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- KVRist
- 282 posts since 3 Oct, 2004
well about a billion hiphop artists would disagree
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- KVRAF
- 6596 posts since 21 Jun, 2004 from Secret Underground Hideout
i'm talkin about music
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
What are they going to do, rummage through my FL Studio project files? f**k them. I'm tired of relying on people like ZER0-G to use 2nd generation samples.
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
well if hip hop's not your fancy, how about every other genre that has fashioned using 2nd generation samples like, oh, 99% of modern electronic music? Such sampling has worked its way into just about every other genre as well.androidlove wrote:i'm talkin about music
I wonder if anyone will actually take action ever. I mean what is going to cause someone's concern if none of the samples are recognizable? That's impossible.
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- KVRAF
- 6596 posts since 21 Jun, 2004 from Secret Underground Hideout
really, that's what i'm saying. why sample some1 else's talent? are these samplers lacking the amount of talent they steal from others?Chase wrote:how about every other genre that has fashioned using 2nd generation samples like, oh, 99% of modern electronic music? Such sampling has worked its way into just about every other genre as well.
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
Taking samples from songs isnt anymore unoriginal than taking them from sample CD's.androidlove wrote:really, that's what i'm saying. why sample some1 else's talent? are these samplers lacking the amount of talent they steal from others?Chase wrote:how about every other genre that has fashioned using 2nd generation samples like, oh, 99% of modern electronic music? Such sampling has worked its way into just about every other genre as well.
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- KVRAF
- 6596 posts since 21 Jun, 2004 from Secret Underground Hideout
i agree
- KVRAF
- 4749 posts since 15 Jul, 2001 from Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, U.K
yeh, it's a bitch.
I got 180 hours community service for making this loop
www.topazproductions.co.uk/temp/before.wav
into this new 6/8 loop
www.topazproductions.co.uk/temp/after.wav
bastardz
ps, you need a loop app to play these.
I got 180 hours community service for making this loop
www.topazproductions.co.uk/temp/before.wav
into this new 6/8 loop
www.topazproductions.co.uk/temp/after.wav
bastardz
ps, you need a loop app to play these.
Sonic Assault wrote:The court ruled quite simply that any and all samples used must paid for, even if they sound completely different from their original.


