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Showing posts with label awsick artist news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awsick artist news. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2013

A Band Called Death

Before Bad Brains, the Sex Pistols or even the Ramones, there was a band called Death.



What's good DJE here people just wanted to posted  about Death... 
it's been about a year or more since i first start talking about this band, I like i said back then this is going to be big. Every film festival this movie been in it has ruled and now was picked up by Drafthouse Films in back February.





A BAND CALLED DEATH [Trailer] from Drafthouse Films on Vimeo.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Slain Rapper Left Behind a Song Addressing Killings in Chicago

Johnny B wrote and recorded this song to highlight violence in Chicago and unfortunately he became victim to that violence he wrote about. This is the song he recorded. Unfortunately the song was not completed but I think its best to post it as he left..it’s called “Just Like You“


Friday, July 20, 2012

Anti-Piracy Group Found Guilty of Cheating Artist In Its Anti-Piracy Ad...

Back in December, Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN aggressively denied allegations of bilking an artist that appeared in its anti-piracy spots, despite massive, unauthorized use beyond the initial agreement. At the same time, royalty collections society Buma/Stemra was accused of seriously underpaying the artist, while offering concession payments to make the problem go away. Well, just this week, an Amsterdam District Court judge has ordered proper payments to the artist, with proper accounting along the way. Not sure if you want to laugh or cry after watching this spot, which first appeared back in 2006. It's now on 'every DVD' according to one joking (sort of)




 The situation started innocently enough, when Dutch musician Melchior Rietveldt was asked by BREIN to provide music for an anti-piracy spot, to be used at a local film festival.  That spot was then used - without Rietveldt's permission - in dozens of DVD titles, including a Harry Potter DVD accidentally discovered by the artist.  In total, Rietveldt's work may have been played billions of times without compensation, and it appears that BREIN did little to control this distribution.
The rest is actually a complex blame game, with everyone from BREIN, Buma/Stemra, and film duplication studios getting named.  But fast-forward to the present, and the Amsterdam Court has validated Rietveldt's multi-year battle to get paid - and to chase down payments.  According to details confirmed by Rietveldt, the Court has now ordered Buma/Stemra to pay Rietveldt 20,000 euros ($25,000), handle all legal costs, and continue to pursue full compensation while keeping Rietveldt updated on case progress. 
Whether that clearly pegs BREIN is unclear, though 'the real killer' seems buried in a complex maze of bad actors.  In that mess, Buma's hands seem just as dirty, if not dirtier than BREIN's.  After pursuing the matter through Buma/Stemra, of which Rietveldt was a member, a scandal erupted when Buma board member Jochem Gerrits offered to help Rietveldt pursue his claim - but only if Rietveldt signed to Gerrits' publishing company.  That would put a healthy 33 percent earnings commission into Gerrits' pocket, for the trouble of chasing down otherwise unrecoverable money.
And how do we know this?  Well, the entire conversation was recorded - and broadcast - by local news source PowNews.  Indeed, Gerrits offered to throw his weight around in upcoming board meetings, according to translated text.  But Gerrits fought back with a defamation lawsuit, arguing that his discussion was conducted legitimately as a publisher - not a Buma board member.  Gerrits stepped down from Buma, ostensibly to let the matter cool down.
If you detect a stinky odor, you're not alone.  But the bigger problem is that Rietsvelt is also hardly alone, and not the only artist to challenge insanely complicated mazes of duplicity and shady dealmaking.  In fact, we'd guess that few artists have the persistence displayed by Rietsveldt, especially against such a thoroughly opaque machine.


Thursday, May 17, 2012

Donna Summer Dead At 63 After Long Battle With Cancer

Donna Summer passed away today at the age of 63 After Long Battle With Cancer... Donna Summer was know as "The Queen of Disco" and in her career has charted 21 hits into the Billboard Top-40 charts,Four of her hits have reached #1 on the Billboard charts.

wait i"m not done... She has had 33 singles reach the Top-100 on the Billboard Charts. An amazing 21 of her singles have hit #1 on the Billboard Dance Charts.

She has won Five Grammy Awards during her career.

She was the first female artist to have four, yes four #1 singles within a 13-month period on the Billboard charts.

Prior to her solo career, she was a back-up singer for the group “Three Dog Night“.

Now you Tell me if that not working "Hard For The Money" man what is... Over the course of her career, she has released 17 Studio albums and numerous compilation and Greatest Hits Albums.

Her latest Album, “Crayons“, was released in 2008.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Adam Yauch aka MCA of the Beastie Boys dies at 47

(Adam Yauch aka MCA pic on the right)

What can I say about Adam Yauch aka "MCA" of Beastie Boys that you don't know already....? Well the one thing I know I can say is that i will miss Adam Yauch B-Boy rap style and his raspy voice saying "I'm MCA..." With more than 20yrs in the rap game the Beastie Boys was the last of a era, that 80's B-Boys style which has long faded away and they stayed true to that sound that we all enjoyed for all these years.

Now you tell me what other rap group who have stay current with their original style from 1984 to 2012

From the 80's 

from 2004 staying true that B-Boy style...

Starting in 2008, Yauch, a director, devoted much of his efforts to film. He launched Oscilloscope Pictures in 2008, a film distribution and international sales unit of his Oscilloscope Laboratories that includes a recording studio and production unit. Under Oscilloscope, Yauch distributed such successful films as Dark Days, Oscar-nominated Exit Through the Gift Shop and The Messenger.

Monday, February 13, 2012

SKRILLEX WINS 3 GRAMMY : IS THIS A NEW DAY IN MUSIC???



Winning three awards – Best Dance Recording, Best Electronic/Dance Album, and Best Remixed Recording – Skrillex, aka Sonny Moore just may have taking music to the next level???

So is this a new day music? Will artist start pushing the boundaries of music again? Will music lovers support true freedom in music...?

Wow what a great time to be living in, The music game is being change right here right now.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Industry | Divided: These High-Profile Artists Are Now Fighting Against SOPA...

by paul

An open letter to Washington from Artists and Creators

We, the undersigned, are musicians, actors, directors, authors, and producers. We make our livelihoods with the artistic works we create. We are also Internet users.

We are writing to express our serious concerns regarding the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).

As creative professionals, we experience copyright infringement on a very personal level. Commercial piracy is deeply unfair and pervasive leaks of unreleased films and music regularly interfere with the integrity of our creations. We are grateful for the measures policymakers have enacted to protect our works.

We, along with the rest of society, have benefited immensely from a free and open Internet. It allows us to connect with our fans and reach new audiences. Using social media services like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, we can communicate directly with millions of fans and interact with them in ways that would have been unimaginable just a few years ago.

We fear that the broad new enforcement powers provided under SOPA and PIPA could be easily abused against legitimate services like those upon which we depend. These bills would allow entire websites to be blocked without due process, causing collateral damage to the legitimate users of the same services - artists and creators like us who would be censored as a result.

We are deeply concerned that PIPA and SOPA's impact on piracy will be negligible compared to the potential damage that would be caused to legitimate Internet services. Online piracy is harmful and it needs to be addressed, but not at the expense of censoring creativity, stifling innovation or preventing the creation of new, lawful digital distribution methods.

We urge Congress to exercise extreme caution and ensure that the free and open Internet, upon which so many artists rely to promote and distribute their work, does not become collateral damage in the process.

Respectfully,

Aziz Ansari

Kevin Devine, Musician

Barry Eisler, Author

Neil Gaiman, Author

Lloyd Kaufman, Filmmaker

Zoƫ Keating, Musician

The Lonely Island

Daniel Lorca, Musician (Nada Surf)

Erin McKeown, Musician

MGMT

Samantha Murphy, Musician

OK Go

Amanda Palmer, Musician (The Dresden Dolls)

Quiet Company

Trent Reznor

Adam Savage, Special Effects Artist (MythBusters)

Hank Shocklee, Music Producer (Public Enemy, The Bomb Squad)

Johnny Stimson, Musician

Monday, December 26, 2011

Press Release

Press Release

Auditions for a table reading:
Karma, an original stage production by S. Haynes

Though Queen and Ezekiel’s love story ended more than thirty years ago, declining health now forces them back under the same roof in the care of their daughter, Sugar. The home turns into both a warzone and a temple where old battles are fought yet redemption can be found. In this journey of the heart Ezekiel and Queen have to decide if the sins of their past will determine their future.


Sunday, January 8, 2012
12:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.

The Gary Comer Youth Center
7200 S. Ingleside Ave.
Chicago, IL 60619

For more information and character breakdown, e-mail kdixon1209@sbcglobal.net

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Beyonce Caught Blatantly Plagiarizing On Latest Video...

by:paul

At least Joe Jonas had a reasonable defense, there was a debate to be had! But this is just... blatant. "This is plagiarism, this is stealing," said Belgian choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, whose 'Rosas danst Rosas' was basically lifted. "What's rude about it is that they don't even bother about hiding it. They seem to think they could do it because it's a famous work."

And to put it in no uncertain terms, here's a comparison of Beyonce's latest video, "Countdown," with clips shot by De Keersmaeker. The comparison itself has already received a million views.



The Beyonce camp isn't admitting guilt. Rather, they're admitting 'inspiration' from the famous work. "Clearly, the ballet 'Rosas danst Rosas' was one of many references for my video 'Countdown'," Beyonce offered in a statement. "It was one of the inspirations used to bring the feel and look of the song to life."

Which translates into, roughly, "what the fuck you gonna do about it?"

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Lil Wayne Accounted for 1 Out of Every 7 Albums Purchased Last Week...

Lopsided much? That's become the saga of the modern-day recording industry, where top-heaviness has become the rule. According to stats published by Nielsen Soundscan, Lil Wayne's Tha Carter IV accounted for 1 out of every 7 albums purchased last week in the US.

Tha Carter IV sold an impressive 964,000 first-week units during its debut week, a 14.3 percent chunk of the broader-week, 6.7 million album total.

But wait: it gets worse. Because the top 10 albums accounted for more than 25 percent of all albums purchased, while just three artists (Wayne, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Adele) placed an album above 100,000 units.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Lil Wayne Just Smashed the First-Week iTunes Sales Record...

The question is whether this starts to change album release timings. According to details just shared by Cash Money and Universal Republic, Lil Wayne just scored the best first-week album sales total on iTunes in history. The album sold more than 300,000 units since debuting immediately after the MTV Video Music Awards last Sunday - and the accomplishment happened after just four days. The rest of the first-week total will come from rival download stores and physical.

The record also says a lot about the iTunes platform. The previous record is merely two weeks old, set by The Throne, a rapid relinquish that suggests lots more record-smashing ahead. And, growing interest on the paid download side - even after all these years.



But this seems to be happening at the expense of physical. Watch the Throne ultimately posted a physical return that was arguably disappointing, despite unique release timings, considerable pre-release hype, and a Best Buy exclusive. And, this is Jay-Z and Kanye West we're talking about, which raises the possibility that Wayne could produce a more lopsided digital total as well (let's see).

Back to the timing question: does this mean that everyone should reorganize their release schedule to coincide with an event, to capture consumer interest at its peak? That's probably case-by-case at this point, though the Tuesday release day is getting more and more antiquated by the week. Stocking physical shelves and coordinating deliveries is far less important, even for mega-retailers like Best Buy.

On the measurement side, Soundscan cares about predictable release periods, because it's so much easier to analyze. But consumers increasingly have no idea what we're talking about.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Jack White Collaborates With Insane Clown Posse to Cover Mozart. For Real.

By Larry Fitzmaurice, August 31, 2011 10:06 a.m. CT


Insane Clown Posse - Leck Mich Im Arsch by Third Man Records


Wow. So, Jack White works with a lot of people on a lot of random projects, right? Well, this makes everything else sound like just another nine-to-five day at the fucking office. Are you ready? Jack White is working for everyone's favorite face-painted, Faygo-spraying hip-hop outfit, Insane Clown Posse.

A press release states that White linked up with Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J to record the single "Leck Mich Im Arsch" (allegedly translates as "Lick me in the arse"), which will go on sale as a 7" and digitally on September 13 via White's Third Man Records. "Leck Mich Im Arsch" uses a melody by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart dating back to 1782.

White produced the single, while rockers JEFF the Brotherhood provided musical backing. The B-side will be "Mountain Girl" (which concerns itself with "tall tales about a shotgun wedding, meth problems and moonshine").

Friday, August 26, 2011

Rappers' 99th Problem? Frivolous Lyrical Lawsuits...Lindsay Lohan sued Pitbul


In case you were wondering whether frivolous lawsuits are a problem in the US, we offer you Exhibit A. Just last week, Lindsay Lohan sued Pitbull for the following lyric:



"Hustlers move in silence, so I'm tiptoein', to keep blowin'

I got it locked up like Lindsay Lohan." (as confirmed by Pitbull)



This is part of the well-known track "Give Me Everything" which features Ne-Yo and Afrojack and seems to be in heavy rotation everywhere. It uses some very familiar lyrical tricks, namely punning and dissing on a major figure. So in this case, "locked up" means both "total dominance or control" and "incarcerated" at the same time (I know, we're nerds with zero street cred, work with us).

Lohan, filing under Stephanie Ovadia in New York, has alleged that Pitbull & Co. are defaming and exploiting the Lohan name, while causing her distress and pain. That is why she's demanding an injunction (meaning, ripping the song off the airwaves and places like iTunes) and damages.

Ridiculous waste of time? Unfortunately, this sounds just like the tidal wave of frivolous lawsuits faced by digital music companies, including Spotify earlier this month. But suits have to be dealt with, regardless of the merit, and they almost always drain money, time, while compromising other opportunities.

In that light, Pitbull is now attempting to diffuse the situation with an olive branch. That includes an apology and an invitation to the see the song performed at the MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs) this weekend (both rebuffed by Lohan).

But the apology was double-edged, because Pitbull also pointed to a major side-effect of success. "Rapping is all about double meanings and metaphors and how you flip certain things," Pitbull said. "As hard as you work to succeed in this music business or in the entertainment, there are four or five people working hard to take it away from you."

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Lil Wayne Tha Carter IV release date...

Lil Wayne is the latest to trigger a non-standard release date. Tha Carter IV will be released on iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers Sunday evening immediately following a VMA performance. The physical happens August 29th.

Stiff? The Throne Sells 177,000 In Second Week...

by paul:

The Best Buy exclusive never really kicked into overdrive. The iTunes exclusive never ramped towards the stratosphere. And a 'military-like' anti-leak strategy had limited impact in the end.

The numbers tell the story. In its second week, The Throne's Watch the Throne shifted just 176,832 units in the US, bringing the cumulative to 612,911 according to Nielsen Soundscan figures. That was supposed to be the tally after week one, at least according to overconfident predictions and pre-release backslapping. Instead, second-week sales slipped a pronounced 59.5 percent.

First-week numbers were also considered soft, though part of that can be blamed on a late start by Best Buy. Jay-Z and Kanye opted for an irregular release day at physical - ie, Friday - a move that opened the possibility of a healthier second week.

Not so, though calls of a 'stiff' may be extreme. Still, this raises a lot more questions than answers, including the role of a mid-release layoff at Island Def Jam. The label released more than 30 staffers after the album was released, though it remains unclear if that timing affected subsequent album support.

Indie retailers may also have something to say on this matter. After the supergroup opted for an extremely-limited exclusive involving iTunes and Best Buy, a consortium of independent retailers expressed outrage at being 'boxed out' of the process. The iTunes+Best Buy strategy seemed driven by business considerations, though Jay-Z later indicated that Best Buy was chosen with anti-leak considerations in mind.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Nick Ashford, Motown legend, dies aged 70

Nick Ashford, who co-wrote classics such as Ain't No Mountain High Enough, dies of throat cancer.

Nick Ashford, one-half of the legendary Motown songwriting duo Ashford & Simpson that penned elegant, soulful classics for Diana Ross and Marvin Gaye has died at the age of 70 from throat cancer.

Ashford and his wife Valerie Simpson wrote Motown classics Ain't No Mountain High Enough and Reach Out And Touch Somebody's Hand (recorded by Ross and You're All I Need To Get By (made famous by Gaye and Tammi Terrell) and they also wrote pop hits such as I'm Every Woman", which was a hit for Chaka Khan and, later, Whitney Houston.

They also had success writing for themselves: Perhaps the biggest known hit sung by them was the 1980s hit Solid As A Rock.

Ashford and Simpson's relationship stretched more than four decades. They met in 1964 in a New York City church; Ashford, a South Carolina native, had come to the city to pursue a dance career. Simpson was a music student, and after connecting with her, they decided to start to write songs together.



Thursday, August 18, 2011

Jay-Z & Kanye fall short

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Does nearly a half-million copies sold constitute the glass being half-full or half-empty? That's the question with Jay-Z and Kanye West's enormously ballyhooed joint project, "Watch the Throne," which debuted with first-week sales of 436,000, a strong but less-kingly-than-expected tally.

The take for "Watch the Throne" will be spun in different ways, taking into account the peculiarities of its release. For the first four days of the week, the Jay-Z/West album was an iTunes exclusive, so you could argue a mere three days of brick-and-mortar sales isn't enough to tell the tale.

On the other hand, because of the unusual lack of advance leaks, anticipation for the project should have been at enough of a fever pitch to make for a day-one blockbuster.

But even strong reviews and word-of-mouth didn't add up to "Throne" debuting as mightily as either of the rappers' most recent solo efforts.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Wu-Tang vs. Jimi Hendrix – Black Gold (Mixtape)


In similar fashion as his past project, Wu-Tang vs. The Beatles (no links, but if you Google, you’ll more than likely find a copy), Tom Caruana mashes up 36 parts Wu a capellas and collides it with some of the incomparable Jimi Hendrix’s catalogue of legendary music. What we’re presented with is a nuclear fusion of ill beats, rhymes and a dash of psychedelics.


Monday, August 15, 2011

Record Industry Braces for Artists’ Battles Over Song Rights


By LARRY ROHTER
Published: August 15, 2011

Since their release in 1978, hit albums like Bruce Springsteen’s “Darkness on the Edge of Town,” Billy Joel’s “52nd Street,” the Doobie Brothers’ “Minute by Minute,” Kenny Rogers’s “Gambler” and Funkadelic’s “One Nation Under a Groove” have generated tens of millions of dollars for record companies. But thanks to a little-noted provision in United States copyright law, those artists — and thousands more — now have the right to reclaim ownership of their recordings, potentially leaving the labels out in the cold.

When copyright law was revised in the mid-1970s, musicians, like creators of other works of art, were granted “termination rights,” which allow them to regain control of their work after 35 years, so long as they apply at least two years in advance. Recordings from 1978 are the first to fall under the purview of the law, but in a matter of months, hits from 1979, like “The Long Run” by the Eagles and “Bad Girls” by Donna Summer, will be in the same situation — and then, as the calendar advances, every other master recording once it reaches the 35-year mark.

The provision also permits songwriters to reclaim ownership of qualifying songs. Bob Dylan has already filed to regain some of his compositions, as have other rock, pop and country performers like Tom Petty, Bryan Adams, Loretta Lynn, Kris Kristofferson, Tom Waits and Charlie Daniels, according to records on file at the United States Copyright Office.

“In terms of all those big acts you name, the recording industry has made a gazillion dollars on those masters, more than the artists have,” said Don Henley, a founder both of the Eagles and the Recording Artists Coalition, which seeks to protect performers’ legal rights. “So there’s an issue of parity here, of fairness. This is a bone of contention, and it’s going to get more contentious in the next couple of years.”

With the recording industry already reeling from plummeting sales, termination rights claims could be another serious financial blow. Sales plunged to about $6.3 billion from $14.6 billion over the decade ending in 2009, in large part because of unauthorized downloading of music on the Internet, especially of new releases, which has left record labels disproportionately dependent on sales of older recordings in their catalogs.

“This is a life-threatening change for them, the legal equivalent of Internet technology,” said Kenneth J. Abdo, a lawyer who leads a termination rights working group for the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences and has filed claims for some of his clients, who include Kool and the Gang. As a result the four major record companies — Universal, Sony BMG, EMI and Warner — have made it clear that they will not relinquish recordings they consider their property without a fight.

“We believe the termination right doesn’t apply to most sound recordings,” said Steven Marks, general counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America, a lobbying group in Washington that represents the interests of record labels. As the record companies see it, the master recordings belong to them in perpetuity, rather than to the artists who wrote and recorded the songs, because, the labels argue, the records are “works for hire,” compilations created not by independent performers but by musicians who are, in essence, their employees.

Independent copyright experts, however, find that argument unconvincing. Not only have recording artists traditionally paid for the making of their records themselves, with advances from the record companies that are then charged against royalties, they are also exempted from both the obligations and benefits an employee typically expects.

“This is a situation where you have to use your own common sense,” said June M. Besek, executive director of the Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts at the Columbia University School of Law. “Where do they work? Do you pay Social Security for them? Do you withdraw taxes from a paycheck? Under those kinds of definitions it seems pretty clear that your standard kind of recording artist from the ’70s or ’80s is not an employee but an independent contractor.”

Daryl Friedman, the Washington representative of the recording academy, which administers the Grammy Awards and is allied with the artists’ position, expressed hope that negotiations could lead to a “broad consensus in the artistic community, so there don’t have to be 100 lawsuits.” But with no such talks under way, lawyers predict that the termination rights dispute will have to be resolved in court.

“My gut feeling is that the issue could even make it to the Supreme Court,” said Lita Rosario, an entertainment lawyer specializing in soul, funk and rap artists who has filed termination claims on behalf of clients, whom she declined to name. “Some lawyers and managers see this as an opportunity to go in and renegotiate a new and better deal. But I think there are going to be some artists who feel so strongly about this that they are not going to want to settle, and will insist on getting all their rights back.”

So far the only significant ruling on the issue has been one in the record labels’ favor. In that suit heirs of Jamaican reggae star Bob Marley, who died in 1981, sued Universal Music to regain control of and collect additional royalties on five of his albums, which included hits like “Get Up, Stand Up” and “One Love.”

But last September a federal district court in New York ruled that “each of the agreements provided that the sound recordings were the ‘absolute property’ ” of the record company, and not Marley or his estate. That decision, however, applies only to Marley’s pre-1978 recordings, which are governed by an earlier law that envisaged termination rights only in specific circumstances after 56 years, and it is being appealed.

Congress passed the copyright law in 1976, specifying that it would go into effect on Jan. 1, 1978, meaning that the earliest any recording can be reclaimed is Jan. 1, 2013. But artists must file termination notices at least two years before the date they want to recoup their work, and once a song or recording qualifies for termination, its authors have five years in which to file a claim; if they fail to act in that time, their right to reclaim the work lapses.

The legislation, however, fails to address several important issues. Do record producers, session musicians and studio engineers also qualify as “authors” of a recording, entitled to a share of the rights after they revert? Can British groups like Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, and Dire Straits exercise termination rights on their American recordings, even if their original contract was signed in Britain? These issues too are also an important part of the quiet, behind-the-scenes struggle that is now going on.

Given the potentially huge amounts of money at stake and the delicacy of the issues, both record companies, and recording artists and their managers have been reticent in talking about termination rights. The four major record companies either declined to discuss the issue or did not respond to requests for comment, referring the matter to the industry association.

But a recording industry executive involved in the issue, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak for the labels, said that significant differences of opinion exist not only between the majors and smaller independent companies, but also among the big four, which has prevented them from taking a unified position. Some of the major labels, he said, favor a court battle, no matter how long or costly it might be, while others worry that taking an unyielding position could backfire if the case is lost, since musicians and songwriters would be so deeply alienated that they would refuse to negotiate new deals and insist on total control of all their recordings.

As for artists it is not clear how many have already filed claims to regain ownership of their recordings. Both Mr. Springsteen and Mr. Joel, who had two of the biggest hit albums of 1978, as well as their managers and legal advisers, declined to comment on their plans, and the United States Copyright Office said that, because termination rights claims are initially processed manually rather than electronically, its database is incomplete.

Songwriters, who in the past typically have had to share their rights with publishing companies, some of which are owned by or affiliated with record labels, have been more outspoken on the issue. As small independent operators to whom the work for hire argument is hard to apply, the balance of power seems to have tilted in their favor, especially if they are authors of songs that still have licensing potential for use on film and television soundtracks, as ringtones, or in commercials and video games.

“I’ve had the date circled in red for 35 years, and now it’s time to move,” said Rick Carnes, who is president of the Songwriters Guild of America and has written hits for country artists like Reba McEntire and Garth Brooks. “Year after year after year you are going to see more and more songs coming back to songwriters and having more and more influence on the market. We will own that music, and it’s still valuable.”

In the absence of a definitive court ruling, some recording artists and their lawyers are talking about simply exercising their rights and daring the record companies to stop them. They complain that the labels in some cases are not responding to termination rights notices and predict that once 2013 arrives, a conflict that is now mostly hidden from view is likely to erupt in public.

“Right now this is kind of like a game of chicken, but with a shot clock,” said Casey Rae-Hunter, deputy director of the Future of Music Coalition, which advocates for musicians and consumers. “Everyone is adopting a wait-and-see posture. But that can only be maintained for so long, because the clock is ticking.”

Monday, August 8, 2011

Chuck D. Calls Out Jay-Z and Kanye West for Materialism During Economic Hardship





by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University – Scholarship in Action

I met the rapper Chuck D at the Measuring the Movement forum, hosted by Rev. Al Sharpton. I sat next to Chuck for a good 30 minutes during the panel discussion and got to appreciate his humility and intelligence as it pertains to the plight of black people. What I also noticed was that Chuck stands a far cry away from his peers regarding whether or not they give a damn about the people who are buying their albums.



In a spin-off to the new song, "Otis," written by Kanye West and Jay-Z, Chuck engages in a lyrical assault like no other, highlighting the fact that it’s not cool for West and Jay-Z to brag about how much money they waste when African Americans are in the middle of one of the most devastating periods in economic history. With 16 percent unemployment and the near complete decimation of black wealth, Chuck speaks directly to the public backlash toward artists who remain ignorant enough to believe that rapping about private jets and half-million dollar cars is preferable to discussing our collective plight. In fact, I’ll never forget when the artist Diddy gave his 16-year old son a half-million dollar car, and then turned around and gave a mere $10,000 to the entire country of Haiti.

Chuck also speaks on the prison industrial complex, which is something that neither Kanye nor Jay-Z seems to have noticed. I met another (nameless) artist who works with West on a regular basis. I asked him if Kanye is in tune with the social issues that plague the black community. To my disappointment, the artist simply said, "Kanye’s on some other sh*t." I would hate to believe that the man who had the courage to speak up on behalf of the victims of Hurricane Katrina has turned himself into just another highly talented corporate monkey.

Hip-hop obviously needs to turn the corner. Using the guidance and inspiration from empowered and progressive artists like Chuck D, one would hope that the creative fire of hip-hop music can be harnessed for progressive change. The time is ripe for a major political movement: Economic times are worse than they’ve been in decades, the Internet allows people to come together like never before, and the disapproval rating of political leaders in Washington is at an all-time low. Chuck is onto something, and I hope that his speaking up against "The Throne" (Jay-Z and Kanye’s latest exercise in self-absorption) is the first of many steps toward giving our community the vision that it needs to create a better life.

Real hope and change lies in the streets, not on Capital Hill and not at Def Jam Records. All of us have to speak up, stand up and make our world into what it needs to be.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is a Professor at Syracuse University and founder of the Your Black World Coalition.