Favoriting Free Music Archive presents Grey Area with Jason Sigal: Playlist from November 22, 2010 Favoriting

Jason Sigal's avatar View Jason Sigal's profile Favoriting

All the hits that fit, plus conversations about the grey area surrounding music and free culture in the digital era. The podcast features Creative Commons music from the Free Music Archive that you can download and share, legally!

iTunes Feed Also available as an MP3 podcast. More info at our Podcast Central page.

<-- Previous playlist | Back to Free Music Archive presents Grey Area with Jason Sigal playlists | Next playlist -->


Favoriting November 22, 2010: talkin' Girl Talk, Sampling, Fair Use and Illegal Art w. Peter DiCola

Listen to this show: MP3 - 128K | Pop-up listen Pop-up player!

(* = new)

Artist Track Album Label Comments New
Karen Cooper Complex  Jerkin' Pretty   Favoriting Shinjuku Birdwalk [1981]  Artifacts/yclept 
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
 
Bum Creek  Bollywood   Favoriting The Sound Of Young Canberra [V/A]  New Weird Australia 
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
*  
Kidkaneivel  Zo0o0o0p!!! feat. Oddisee   Favoriting Jus Like Music & Apple Juice Break present: Oscillations Part 2  Jus' Like Music Records 
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
 
ACT  ESPioNS   Favoriting Revenge Toy   
Dogmazic's FMA mix // Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
 
 

Music behind DJ:
Smoked Meat Fax Machine 

Slums of Heaven   Favoriting

Slums of Heaven 

Ancient Robot 


Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
 

 
Girl Talk  Jump On Stage   Favoriting All Day  Illegal Art 
Girl Talk @ Illegal Art //
All Day Samples dot com //
Creative Commons BY-NC
 
*  
 

talking Girl Talk w/ Peter DiCola

On November 14th, the Illegal Art label dropped All Day, the first release in over two years by the world's most renowned mashup artist Girl Talk. The free, purportedly "Creative Commons" release is a pop culture kaleidoscope with 372 overlapping samples of songs by the likes of The Rolling Stones, Prince, Nirvana and Beyoncé. Girl Talk claims this is a transformative fair use, and we'd like to believe him, but then again, it was released on a label called "Illegal Art". So why hasn't Girl Talk been sued?

We'll address this question and more with law professor Peter DiCola, an expert on copyright law’s regime for digital sampling, and co-author (with Kembrew McLeod) of the forthcoming book Creative License: Digital Sampling, Culture, and the Law.

 
Sushishooshamp  Funambule (hip-hop version)   Favoriting    
Dogmazic's FMA mix // Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
 
 
Amanda  Up Against the Wall Redneck Mama   Favoriting Power Child FMA Sampler   
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
 
 
The Sediment Club  Panic Berlin Fun   Favoriting Live at WFMU on Talk's Cheap 7/7/2009   
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
 
Mazing Vids  Could You Die   Favoriting Drastic Mirth  Stricken Records 
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
 
Sharitah Manush  Beyond the Universe   Favoriting Dogmazic mix   
Free Music Archive // Creative Commons BY-NC-ND
 
 
Hayvanlar Alemi  Guarana Superpower   Favoriting Demolar 2007-2008   
if you think this sounds good, you should hear this Turkish group's new Sublime Frequencies LP!
 
 


Listener comments!

  9:02pm
Michael Gregoire:

Good episode. Regarding Girl Talk... you've gotta wonder if GT and Illegal Art are actually trying to goad copyright owners into suing them and in turn bringing about a fairly high-profile landmark case about Fair Use (which IMO is needed to finally draw a line in the sand on what is actually fair use).
Bottom
Comment!
Name
Email
(C) 2024 WFMU. Generated by KenzoDB, written by Ken Garson