Friday, November 21, 2008

Archive for October, 2007

OiNK Gets Killed, The Internet Squeals Its Discontent

Posted by blackhat on October 25th, 2007
Those eager to snag the new Hives album off OiNK the other day came to a saddening realization: As we reported, the long running, invite-only BitTorrent Web site had been shut down in a combined effort by British and Dutch police. The operator of the site, a twenty-four-year-old man from Middlesborough, U.K., was arrested and will likely face so many charges, not even T.I. would want to switch places with him right now. Plus, users who went to the site were greeted with the ominous message, “A criminal investigation continues into the identities and activities of the site’s users.” Has the record industry and the Interpol that didn’t come out with Antics finally struck fear in the hearts of illegal downloaders after being on the brink of defeat? It’s like The Empire Strikes Back, but with the RIAA cast as Darth Vader. While many folks will miss OiNK and its album-leaking ways, a few points: First, to those squealing on the Internet about the injustice of the shut-down, keep in mind that the site was engaging in illegal activity so the bust shouldn’t come as a huge shock. Plus, this doesn’t mean people will actually have to pay for music or wait for release dates again. There are still dozens of torrents and P2Ps out there, each one eager to provide someone who’s down with the piracy trade with the new Hives album right now. So how are you reacting to OiNK’s last stand? Did you go and buy Ween’s La Cucharacha, or did you use alternate methods? Does the demise of this site mark the end of an illegal era?
  • At a press conference announcing his partnership with Ciroc vodka, Diddy said last week’s claims that he threw a punch in a New York club over a woman were “just totally overblown … I don’t fight over girls.” Diddy did admit, “I am a human being and I will get into an argument at times,” and said police have looked into the situation. NYPD sources told Reuters he could face a misdemeanor assault charge.
  • Police responded to a profanity complaint at Missouri State University earlier this month when a student band covering Against Me!’s “Baby, I’m an Anarchist” delivered the line “I was burning that fucker and stringing my black flag high.” According to the school’s Expressive Activity Policy, the concert was held in a designated “free speech zone” that allows free expression for all, excluding those that are “obscene, defamatory or incites violence.”
  • University of Kansas students were relieved when spray-painted graffiti declaring “10.23.07″ turned out to be promotion for Coheed and Cambria’s new album and not, as rumored, the date of a school shooting. Someone had shot out windows of a campus dorm during the school’s fall break, leading to a large scare when the graffiti appeared.
  • Alan Ellis, the creator of BitTorrent site OiNK who was arrested earlier this week, said his site is “no different to something like Google,” explaining to U.K.’s The Daily Telegraph, “If Google directed someone to a site they can illegally download music they are doing the same as what I have been accused of. I am not making any OiNK users break the law. People don’t pay to use the site.”
  • Portishead are close to finishing their third album, according to what keyboardist Geoff Barrow wrote in the band’s blog, Pitchfork reports. Barrow theorized “one more day should do it,” earlier this week, indicating the band was almost done completing artwork selection and “getting live stuff together.”

Kid Rock Faces Potential Lawsuit From Molly Hatchet Knock-Off

Posted by blackhat on October 25th, 2007
Kentuckian Maurice Foreman claims that Kid Rock’s “So Hott,” the first single from Rock N Roll Jesus, is a direct rip-off of Foreman’s “Slow Death,” which was supposedly copyrighted back in 1997. The evidence, according to Foreman, is that Rock sings “So Hott” three times in the chorus (just like in “Slow Death”!) and that the two songs have near-identical lead guitar riffs. We listened to both songs, and Foreman’s claims are just straight up ridiculous. First off, Foreman’s song sounds like it was recorded on some eight-track tape-era medium. The chances that Rock by some miracle heard this Kentucky mountain man’s basement tape and felt inspired is less likely than a Kid Rock/Tommy Lee VMA rematch. That is, unless Rock is a member of some BitTorrent site that specializes in southern rock wanna-bes. If you’re gonna sue Kid Rock, at least think of something more creative.
If you thought Pink Floyd had exhausted all their fortieth anniversary surprises after they unleashed their three-disc The Piper at the Gates of Dawn reissue, think again. The band is releasing the massive Oh By The Way, which culls together all of the band’s proper studio albums into one box set. Technically, the band formed around 1965, making them forty-two, but this belated birthday present makes up for the oversight. Each compact disc is repackaged in mini-vinyl reproductions, complete with all the posters and postcards and dust jackets that accompanied the original records, except tiny-sized. They even brought back the original, iconic Dark Side of the Moon album cover for the first time since 1993, which is enough to warrant purchase. While the set includes every studio album from Piper to 1994’s The Division Bell, it curiously lacks the must-have rarities collection Relics. Storm Thorgersen, who is responsible for the majority of PF’s most well known artwork, was even employed to design the new cover. There are additional rumors that there might be an accompanying DVD featuring interviews and live performances. The set is out December 4th, giving people adequate time to wrap this behemoth in time for the holidays.

Alternate Takes: Just $9,250 a Song!

Posted by blackhat on October 25th, 2007
On October 1st, Radiohead announced that fans could pay a price of their choosing for the new In Rainbows. Three days later, the verdict in the first RIAA suit against an illegal downloader to actually go to trial came in, and Jammie Thomas, a thirty-year-old single mom of two, was socked with a $220,000 judgment for sharing twenty-four tracks. Early estimates had Radiohead buyers paying an average of $10 for the album, or $1 per song. Thomas will have to pay $9,250 per song. Radiohead and Jammie Thomas are symbols of the same thing: how directionless the industry as a whole has become. Whatever it turns out to be, Radiohead’s move played in the media as a death knell for the major labels, as Trent Reznor and Madonna immediately announced they would follow suit and find new ways to release their music. It’s unclear how many other bands could dump their labels, and it’s worth noting that all three of these artists are bigger touring than album acts these days, and they got to that level with years of record-company support. It’s also interesting that the best business mind in the bunch — that would be Madonna — simply switched conglomerates, from no-longer-a-superpower Warner Bros. to no-longer-called-Clear Channel Live Nation. What is a label for? The old answer — manufacturing and distributing CDs and promoting them to radio — no longer holds much sway now that music has digitally dematerialized and radio has been deregulated into one vast strip mall. Everyone acknowledges that the labels as we know them are done. So it’s hard to see what the RIAA suits against file-traders accomplish, except further alienating the kids who already regard the majors with greater contempt than they do Big Oil or Halliburton. (It’s more personal — Halliburton doesn’t sue their friends.) The RIAA maintains the suits educate the public that trading is illegal, though it would be better advised to try educating the public that prices for new CDs have dropped pretty much across the board (most can be had for $10, yet the $18.98 list price is what sticks in people’s minds). Radiohead’s masterstroke was putting their audience in control. Control is something that music fans — many of them believers in the specious conspiracy theory that the record industry force-feeds its consumers garbage (how else to explain Britney in 1999, or Hannah Montana today?) — haven’t felt enough of since the industry became locked in a struggle to take power back from filetraders. No one really knows how long it will take the endgame to play out, but in another decade or so the major labels will likely look more like cable companies, piggybacking on someone else’s fiberoptic bandwidth and occasionally rolling out some original content that’s Sopranos-level but most of which is simply diverting. We’ll rely on them to deliver big hits and classics we’ve already come to know, and maybe we’ll pay on-demand prices for early access to a release by an artist we’re passionate about. Meanwhile, the record industry looks afraid of the future. And Radiohead get to play the prophets of tomorrow.

Carr practices again; Fox mum on choice

Posted by blackhat on October 25th, 2007
David Carr practiced again Thursday, but Carolina coach John Fox still held off naming him the starting quarterback ahead of Vinny Testaverde for Sunday's game against Indianapolis. Fox said Carr, who has been slowed by a compression fracture in his lower back, responded well to consecutive practices. "He's looked good. I thought he had a good practice today," Fox said. "He didn't have any setbacks." Fox has said Carr will play if he's healthy.