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Peter Gabriel Wants You to Re-Shock the Monkey

PreacherTom writes "The party line for the music industry has been clear: discourage music downloads at all cost. However, singer Peter Gabriel is taking things in a different direction. In order to promote his own label, he is actually encouraging people to not only download his music, but also adapt it into something more modern. In doing so, he actually posted a sample pack of Shock the Monkey consisting of vocals and other pieces of the original multitrack recording. Some in the music business would call this the commercial equivalent of hiring kidnappers to babysit. In actuality, Gabriel is pleased with the results."

312 comments

  1. HIM! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    So HE'S the one behind those insipid "shock the monkey" banner ads that inspired me to write AdBlock! I am calling upon all wise men to boycott Peter Gabriel. It shouldn't be hard, considering he's just some stupid blogger.

    1. Re:HIM! by fohat · · Score: 1

      I believe the ad was "Shoot the Monkey", so, no points there.
      Better luck next time!

      --
      Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    2. Re:HIM! by karmatic · · Score: 1

      Actually, it was "Punch the monkey".

    3. Re:HIM! by WWWWolf · · Score: 1

      There were multiple variations of the same ad. "Punch the monkey" ad was the first. May have had the shooting ad too. Apparently hitting a moving target in a little box was too difficult for some users, so they switched to a wide-angle taser or something with "Shock the monkey". One click, one kill.

    4. Re:HIM! by TheCybernator · · Score: 2, Funny

      In Soviet Russia.....Monkey shocks you!!

    5. Re:HIM! by flewp · · Score: 4, Funny

      Apparently hitting a moving target in a little box was too difficult for some users, so they switched to a wide-angle taser or something with "Shock the monkey". One click, one kill.

      I pwned that game with my l33t aimbot and wallhacks, n00b.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    6. Re:HIM! by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      But the lasoo the bull game is sooooo much fun!!!. Seriously, I don't use adblock, but i'm a big fan of flashblock. Has anybody noticed the FMV commercials with sound which sites have started using? That's the most annoying thing i've ever seen. Way worse than pop-ups, pop-unders, hovering divs that move across the screen, and every other ad I've ever seen, put together.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    7. Re:HIM! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia.....Monkey shocks you!!

      In Neocon America, you're rendered to a country where you are shocked by an outsourced torture monkey.

  2. Been done by NIN already..... by acomj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nine inch Nails put out a track and allowed it to be remixed..

    see

    http://apple.slashdot.org/apple/05/04/16/1417205.s html?tid=141&tid=3

    1. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by atomicstrawberry · · Score: 4, Informative

      NIN is also mentioned in TFA, but this is slashdot so you're excused for not actually reading it.

    2. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by $lashdot · · Score: 5, Informative

      NIN was late to the game. Peter Gabriel put out two CD-ROMs in the mid-90s that allowed for remixing of his tracks. Even before that, I remember that when The Shaman released the CD-single for their "Move Any Mountain" track, it included all of the tracks and samples that made up the recording.

    3. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but neither of those were promoted by Apple on Garageband, so they don't count. As we all know, Apple sticks it to the RIAA all the time and is the company most friendly to open intellectual property and open source in the universe!!!11`1one`1

    4. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by somethinghollow · · Score: 1

      I was thinking about doing a Peter Gabriel vs Nine Inch Nails... That could be fun.

    5. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by future+assassin · · Score: 1

      From 1991 LA Styles "James Brown Is Dead" single cd also contains samples of that track. On the cd the samples track is called (Take Outs)

      --
      by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    6. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by Steve001 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In the 1990s Todd Rundgren released a disc for the CD-I system called "TR-1" that allowed you to modify the mix. You could choose change the producer, the mix, and the speed of the album on the fly.

    7. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by clickclickdrone · · Score: 1

      I remember the Shamen one - 3 x 12inch singles with about 20 remixes and all the components. Cool! Prior to that though there was a Jean Michel Jarre 12inch (Zoolook maybe?) that had many of the samples as seperate elements so you could do your own version and that would have been about 1985.

      --
      I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
    8. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by clickclickdrone · · Score: 1

      I just remembered an earlier one. Can't remember the specifics but on the back of the early 80's rash of bands in the UK and 'cheap' home recording gear, someone thought it would be a good idea to release singles as 4 track cassettes for all those masses (?) of 4 track recorders people were buying (Fostex etc) for their home recording/mixing. The idea was you used your 4-track cassette system to mix the 4 different tracks, add reverb or whatever to create your own version of your favourite single. It only lasted a few months before someone grew a brain but ISTR about half a dozen different artists released singles that way.

      --
      I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
    9. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by malf-uk · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Wish I could find my copies of that.

      Also, in 2003, Marillion ran a competition to remix tracks from their album Anoraknophobia and the winning tracks ended up a CD, though you had to pay for the source material to enter it.

      http://www.marillion.com/remix/index.htm

      --
      R Tape loading error, 0:1
    10. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by dintech · · Score: 1

      Indeed its been done by the thousands of people who released .MOD music back in the Amiga days, myself included.

    11. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In the long lost times of 1996 Pitch Shifter released Infotainment?, which shipped with all the samples used in the album's songs. So it isn't that uncommon.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    12. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      Reznor remixed Peter Gabriel's "Darkness".

      --
      -mkb
    13. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by yanos · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's starting to be common. Personal favorite Deerhoof did the same thing last year.

    14. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by $1uck · · Score: 1

      I thought I would be the only person on slashdot to know that. I have that shaman cd laying around somewhere. Nice Nick btw.

    15. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Or read it and was looking for good karma. Not much different than those who re-submit dups from earlier today to yesterday.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    16. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by brightmidnight · · Score: 1

      In fact, BT did this a LONG time ago. Three years ago, in 2003, so you can't say NIN was original. He posted different versions of the track "Force of Gravity" and allowed fans/wannabe DJs to remix them as they pleased. Of course, BT isn't nearly as famous as NIN or Peter Gabriel, so this didn't garner quite the publicity they have with their stunts. Unfortunate, because the man is talented.

      --
      -- Save Google Answers! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4E5btrmqyA
    17. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by Impeesa · · Score: 1

      Mike Oldfield's last cd, Light & Shade, was released with a couple tracks in "u-myx" format. You set up their software or something and then you can remix without even having to know tracking and 'real' mixing.

    18. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by mink · · Score: 1

      Billy Thorpe?

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    19. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by brightmidnight · · Score: 1

      Nope. BT. Brian Transeau. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Transeau I guess you're not into trance/electronica/dance music, huh?

      --
      -- Save Google Answers! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4E5btrmqyA
    20. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by object88 · · Score: 1

      As did Haujobb with their Matrix album.

    21. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mogwai did this to with their song Hunted by a Freak.

    22. Re:Been done by NIN already..... by mink · · Score: 1

      I am, but not that current on it.
      BT can stand for a lot and thats the first thing that jumped into my mind.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  3. i'm going by dubiousmike · · Score: 4, Funny

    to remix Peter Gabriel and Paris Hilton's new song and call it Shock the Junkie

    1. Re:i'm going by benplaut · · Score: 1

      Or something from Queen--Shock the funky!
      Green day... Punk the monkey (or shock the punky)

    2. Re:i'm going by sa1lnr · · Score: 1

      to Spank the Monkey. ;)

  4. If I shock the monkey... by atomicstrawberry · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... do I "win $20"?

    1. Re:If I shock the monkey... by ztuni2007 · · Score: 1

      Of course... now if you'll just fill out these forms....

    2. Re:If I shock the monkey... by flu1d · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Free iPod dude, you'll get a free iPod

  5. Re:suck 2.0 by mfh · · Score: 0

    What respect is due? I didn't detect ANY respect in your post, troll.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
  6. Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you compress a single track of a song into an mp3 (or ogg or whatever) does it compress better than compressing multiple tracks mixed together? It's my understanding that the first step of compressing a wav to mp3 is to seperate out all the sound tracks. This being an imprecise process, wouldn't you get better results if the sound tracks were already seperated? So when musicians are making mp3s do they do it with seperate tracks or do they mix the tracks together and then encode an mp3 from the resulting mix, which immediately goes and tries to seperate the tracks again?

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Someone help me out here.. by mabu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      An mp3 is just another audio format. It's not a step in a process. An audio file can be represented as a single track, or a multitude of tracks, and then is stored in a particular format, which may or may not be compressed or lossy.

      Anyone distributing tracks in mp3 format isn't releasing top-quality material. If you really want the real deal, you distribute non-lossy formats like .wav or shn.

    2. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      short answer?

      no.

    3. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you totally missed the point of my question. Does lossy compression work better on single instrument tracks than it does on multiple tracks mixed together, i.e., songs?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    4. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Keith+Russell · · Score: 5, Funny
      If you really want the real deal, you distribute non-lossy formats like .wav or shn.

      Somebody just spoke of losless audio on Slashdot without mentioning Ogg FLAC. What is this world coming to?

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    5. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does lossy compression work better on single instrument tracks than it does on multiple tracks mixed together, i.e., songs?

      Yes; quality of individual tracks is really not all that important in music production. (You'd be surprised how many of your favorite older songs have synth tracks recorded through noisy 8-bit DACs. I think even the high-end Fairlights were only 10 bits in the 80s.)

    6. Re:Someone help me out here.. by dubiousmike · · Score: 1

      The track gets "mixed down" into a stereo track, then encoded into an MP3.

    7. Re:Someone help me out here.. by mabu · · Score: 1

      no. audio is audio, whether it's a single instrument or more.... maybe mathmatically, some instruments can compress better than a wider frequency spectrum of audio, but it's not worth mentioning.

    8. Re:Someone help me out here.. by jmv · · Score: 1

      Sorry, your understanding of MP3 is entirely wrong. The closest MP3 does to what you're talking about it trying to discriminate between tones and noise (each instrument usually contains both) when computing the psychoacoustic masking curve. In all cases, only a single signal is processed and there no separation (which is BTW impossible outside of "toy problems" when you only have a single channel) taking place.

    9. Re:Someone help me out here.. by mabu · · Score: 1

      lol... yea, flac too

    10. Re:Someone help me out here.. by kfg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's my understanding that the first step of compressing a wav to mp3 is to seperate out all the sound tracks.

      Your understanding is incorrect. Once mixed, track info is lost. You have a single stereo mix. Seperating out tracks would like trying to reconstruct a banana from a smoothie.

      You can, however, run a soothie through a sieve to sort what's left by size. Lossy compression seperates out frequencies into those that can and "cannot" be heard.

      KFG

    11. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "It's my understanding that the first step of compressing a wav to mp3 is to seperate out all the sound tracks. This being an imprecise process, wouldn't you get better results if the sound tracks were already seperated?"

      I'd say no because each compression thread (i.e. track) would be unaware of the others and would miss opportunities to optimize harmonics. I think each track would sound good by itself, but there might be some strange effects produced when they're mixed.

    12. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1
      Yeah true. Just seems to me that if you were to compress each track individually and do the down mixing in the music player you would end up with much better compression and a better experience because:
      • there's a lot less entropy in each track
      • you can tweak the variable bit and other parameters of the compression for each track to balance sound quality and size appropriately
      • there's plenty of spare cpu cycles on the client side anyways
      • some people have better than stereo output (dolby/whatever)
      • people can reuse your music easier because they receive the tracks seperated


      Of course, the last reason is exactly the reason why the music industry wouldn't appreciate this format of music distribution, but I'm sure lots of other people would. But maybe it just isn't feasible for some other technical reason I'm not aware of.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    13. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      True. I do know there's no "and" in "dick squat" though. Why didn't you choose an insult from your native language?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    14. Re:Someone help me out here.. by kfg · · Score: 1

      I think each track would sound good by itself, but there might be some strange effects produced when they're mixed.

      For starters, the end result wouldn't be an mp3, but a wav of an mp3. If you can think of a point to that, you're either a better man than I am, or loopy.

      KFG

    15. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends on the lossy compression and the track, but, I'm guessing that you get better compression for everything together, as opposed to each component separately, because the codec (if it's perceptual) will be able to get better compression on the quiet bits of track A when track B is loud and so on.

      That means that you'd expect mixed tracks to have a higher compression ratio. In practice, it's moot, as even if you get twice the compression ratio for single instruments if there's four times the data, then the compressed version for the single instruments is going to be twice as big.

      I think the fact that the MPEG4 standard (which is a generic standard for multimedia, the video codec's only part) doesn't recommend splitting off all the separate tracks, unless you're going to do some postprocessing on them (yes, the postprocessing is in the standard too) suggests this is the case, but of course, this does rather depend on the full thing not being made of a couple of 5 second loops.

      (For reference, I think the MPEG4 standard became not a video standard, when they started talking about compositing video, 2D graphics with streamed 3D graphics, providing programmability by embedding Java (MPEGlets) and started to define an extension for multiplayer virtual worlds.)

    16. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      there's a lot less entropy in each track

      Lossy audio compression is not about entropy - i.e. information theory - it is about psychoacoustic modeling. In other words, it is about trying to throw away data that the human brain would throw away anyway. Thus your idea is probably highly unlikely to work in practice - when listening to a solo instrument, the human brain will be more 'focused' and probably throw away less data than when listening to a complete mix of instruments and vocals. Thus, in order to achieve relatively the same level of quality the total size of two discrete tracks compressed with mp3 is likely to be larger than even six tracks mixed together and then compressed with mp3.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    17. Re:Someone help me out here.. by ianejames · · Score: 1

      Yes, compression works better on less complex sounds. It takes less data to describe a simple sound and most of the waveform information can be thrown away. However, it's much preferable to mix together the uncompressed tracks and then compress. This is because some frequencies may get cancelled out, while others may add together to produce a significant frequency which would have been thrown away had the individual instruments been compressed.

      Additionally, I seriously doubt the studios would like to give you the data for each individual track if such a format existed for consumers.

      Of course, IANASE (Sound Engineer).

    18. Re:Someone help me out here.. by 7Prime · · Score: 1, Informative

      Alright I fucking HATE this description (and I've heard it before) that notes consist of "tone" and "noise". That's just a really detremental way of looking at sound. Most of that "noise" consists of harmonics, as well as other resonating frequencies thrown into the mix, so many that it "appears" to be random. Fuck, how simple do you want to get? is anything that's not a pure sine wave, "noise"? Take my 20% pulse wave, that's pretty fucking "noisy". God, I had a first year electronic music professor use this description, it screwed with my head for weeks until I realized that it was a total bullshit way of looking at sound. Thankfully, she got fired, and none of my other electronic music profs ever used that model again. "Noise" is random, very little sound is entirely random, it's just complicated enough that noone wants to bother breaking it down. But do some complex Fourier transformations on tones, and you'll see just how much "noise" that shit really is.

      Sorry for sounding like an ass, I've just heard that description before, and it seems like a way you would describe sound on Seseme Street.

      --
      Multiplayer Gaming (defined): Sitting around, discussing single-player games with my friends, at the bar.
    19. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Call me crazy here, but wouldn't you wanna take advantage of *both* lossy and lossless compression techniques to get the smallest file with the best sound quality? It's not one or the other.. is it?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    20. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Skippy_kangaroo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Others have provided useful aspects of the answer to your question but I don't think anyone has boiled it down yet.

      In short - No. A single track compressed will work better in mp3 than individual tracks mixed together.

      The reason is that mp3 is designed precisely to compress single multi-instrument tracks and makes use of psychoacoustics to do this. The gist of which is, the more complicated a sound is (multiple instruments/frequencies) the less of each individual instrument (frequency) you are likely to be able to perceive. Thus, with all the instruments together in the one track, the mp3 algorithm can work better to strip out the subtler elements you don't perceive. If you are just compressing a single instrument there is less of that compression that can be done because, for example, it doesn't know that the rhythm guitar is being drowned by the kick drum at that point in time. Or as a corollary, compressing a single instrument will have to remove stuff you can hear just to hit the same bitrate as the compressed single track. So, combining individual tracks will lead to a worse outcome, all other things being equal, than compressing the already mixed track.

    21. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I guess all I was thinking was that mixing throws away information. If you were to get the mixer and the compressor to work together you'd get better results.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    22. Re:Someone help me out here.. by plastik55 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The heart of music compression is exploiting masking effects - a loud sound obscures quieter sounds that happen near the same time and frequency. When compressing a mixed together song, the encoder will not bother to encode the sound of e.g. a clarinet at he moment a cymbal crashes, because you wouldn't be able to hear it anyway. This is one of the ways mp3 saves information, and encoding tracks separetely would prevent this from happening.

      Re: your first point about entropy -- the entropy in a downmixed track is strictly less than or equal to the sum of the entropies of the individual tracks. So encoding the tracks separately would require more space for the same quality.

      --

      I have a positive modifier on Troll. When I mod someone Troll their karma should go UP!

    23. Re:Someone help me out here.. by dabraun · · Score: 1

      Bah. From a compression point of view the approach to storing well defined waves and relatively random data is very different. If you can effectively subtract out all the well defined waves, store them very effeciently, and then be left with a 'noise' track that is considerably lower in terms of it's dynamic range - you can then effectively compress the noise track and end up using a lot less space. How many of the discrete waveforms you can actually extract and how large the remaining dynamic range of the noise is will affect just how much you can compress the audio before being forced to throw data away.

      Picture a noisy sine wave that only deviates from a clean sine wave by 10% in most places. Suntract the sine wave, compress the remaining bits which don't require a full 16 bits to represent them because they never or rarely contain values high enough to need this. Decide how much of the noise you can cut (if it consists of 10 bits of dynamic range can you drop that to 8 bits without noticably losing quality? How many values would this skew and by how much? This can be easily calculated...) Consider making exceptions for the occasional non-regular peak noise values and storing those seperately (if they were regular they could be stored as a wave). Of course it's a lot more complicated than that with actual music.

    24. Re:Someone help me out here.. by hdparm · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I got really confused with contradictory answers to original poster's question. Now I know!

    25. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know dick, and you know squat. You know dick and squat. You're obviously not very good at English even if it is your native language.

      Also, the GGP did in fact answer your question, you simply didn't understand the answer.

    26. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      You can't rationalize "dick squat" ok? It's an idiom. Much like when someone calls you a "troll" you can't object on the grounds that you are tall, it doesn't work that way.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    27. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Extracting those discrete waveforms is called modelling, and how good your model is defines how much you can extract. So, for example, if you have a guitar model and you apply it to a track that has nothing but guitar on it, your model is going to match a hell of a lot better than if you have vocals on the track with the guitar. Even if you apply your guitar model, subtract the resulting approximation to get the error and then apply your vocals model, you're still not going to get as good results as you would if the tracks were seperate because of the noise accumulation. This is the kind of stuff FLAC does for lossless compression. I've not heard of people doing similar stuff for lossy compression, thus my original question, but there's probably a good reason.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    28. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      There would probably be more "space" so you'd have a higher compression ratio, especially for VBR. Consider a hypothetical string quartet - the output mix would have quite a large bandwidth (from bass up to the upper registers of the violin). Each individual part would compress rather better than the final mix. Of course, they'd still add up to a larger set of files.

    29. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Merovign · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to add anything useful here, but I do want to know:

      Who told you this, and can you hit them for me? It would make me feel better.

      Maybe I should create a Snopes Clone just for computer tech... unless someone has already done it.

    30. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually the Fairlight was 8-bit, as were the Emulator, Emulator II and Ensoniq Mirage (among others). The latter is quite interesting in that the DOC chip (which handled the sample playback) found its way into other Ensoniq synths (where short waveform loops were held in ROM) as well as the Apple IIgs. In the Mirage and Ensoniq ESQ and SQ range it fed into rather nice 24dB/octave analogue filters, giving a very rich and warm sound from the fairly low-quality samples. The PPG Wave series of wavetable synths also used 8-bit samples, again fed through a 24dB/octave filter. It was only a little later that 12-bit sampling became common, with Akai, Casio, Emu, Sequential Circuits and Ensoniq brought out 12-bit samplers (again, Ensoniq at least also used the voice chips in wavetable-based synths), then ultimately on to 16 bits.

      Oh, and let's not forget the many 8-bit parallel port sound devices in the early 90s like the Covox Speech Thing, Disney Sound Source and others.

    31. Re:Someone help me out here.. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      actually I just thought of the coolest way it could possibly work and went with that :) Nah. I obviously misread something 10 years ago when I was interested in this stuff and it's just festered in my mind since then. I can do a similar thing for video if you like. How I really think video compression works: every X number of frames emit a keyframe, find the differences between the next two consecutive frames, use the current motion vector model to predict those changes, calculate the error, modify the model to reduce the error, repeat for the next N frames, emit the motion vector model. How I wish video compression worked: detect the transitions between scenes in a film, break the film up into scenes, for each scene create a model of the objects in the scene, optimize the movement and representation of objects to reduce the error between frames, emit the models and scene transitions, reusing scene models if you happen to transistion back to a scene you were previously in (good for intercutting). Ultimately you'd just end up with a quake engine to playback the film on the client :)

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    32. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Call me crazy here, but wouldn't you wanna take advantage of *both* lossy and lossless compression techniques to get the smallest file with the best sound quality? It's not one or the other.. is it?

      Lossless compression is applied to the results of the lossy compression, it would not be useful to do it the other way around. The result is that low entropy in the original data does not necessarily translate to low entropy in the results of the lossy stage.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    33. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that depends, but the simple answer is no.

      compare this to having an image with multiple layers... you can compress it better if you "flatten" the layers and then compress it than compressing each layer separately.

      except in some special cases when separate layers are fairly simple and easier to compress than their combination. i guess the same would apply to audio.

      the longer answer would require explaining how lossy audio compression works, but it's something like this:
      if you have a sound of a jet engine recorded on one track and someone whispering on the other... if you mix them together, the whispering will be practically inaudible in the roar of the jet engine so the compressed result of those two tracks mixed together would be almost identical to the compressed sound of the jet engine alone.

      ergo, mixing and then compressing yields better overall quality for the same amount of bytes than compressing separate tracks.

    34. Re:Someone help me out here.. by schon · · Score: 1

      no. audio is audio, whether it's a single instrument or more

      Yeah, and an image is an image, whether it's a large amount of a single color, or an image where every pixel is different.

    35. Re:Someone help me out here.. by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

      To take this to a barely reasonable extreme, the best compression is Midi. Figure out what notes were being played by which instrument and at what time, and store only that.

      But, of course, everyone hates Midi!

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    36. Re:Someone help me out here.. by 7Prime · · Score: 1

      You do realize that 95% of the time, when you turn on your TV, you're hearing some form of MIDI, right? Most commercials, and all but something like 8 shows use almost exclusively synthesized instruments... and most people will never hear the difference. MIDI isn't just Sound Blaster Bleeps and Bloops anymore.

      As a composer, MIDI is a godsend, even if the final product is a live orchestral score, it really enables you to do changes on the fly, and be able to run it by directors / clients / producers, without re-recording orchestra. So no, not everyone hates MIDI.

      --
      Multiplayer Gaming (defined): Sitting around, discussing single-player games with my friends, at the bar.
    37. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Q. If you compress a single track of a song into an mp3 (or ogg or whatever) does it compress better than compressing multiple tracks mixed together?
      +
      VBR is more effective on a single instrument because the waveform is simpler. The silence in the track will compress extremely well.
      If you use a fixed rate compression, it doesn't matter.

      Q. This being an imprecise process, wouldn't you get better results if the sound tracks were already seperated?
      +
      No. Compression results in a noticable degradation of sound quality. If you take a bunch of mp3s and mix them this issue is compounded. Then when you compress the two channel mixdown of these mp3's into an mp3, the quality is degraded even more.

      Q.So when musicians are making mp3s do they do it with seperate tracks or do they mix the tracks together and then encode an mp3 from the resulting mix, which immediately goes and tries to seperate the tracks again?
      +
      Professionally recorded tracks are recorded in a studio to 24bit/48khz or 24bit/96khz or 24bit/192khz wav format. Sometimes people use 32 bit as well.

      Increased bit rate, increases the dynamic range of the recording.

      32bit would be appropriate for symphonic, jazz or movie soundtracks since these applications require the largest dynamic range possible for effect and nuance. Even 16 bit will do for most pop and rock music since by the time the mastering engineers (at the record company's behest) finish squashing it with compression, there's 6db of dynamic range, at the most. It's all full on LOUD. 16bit can handle this dynamic range easily.

      Increased sampling speed increases the frequency response range.

      The only recording which will sound better than 24/192 is analog, and then it depends on who you talk to. The 24/192 will have better frequency response and dynamic range, but analog has "warmth" (laymen's term for better harmonic distortion characteristics ) that a lot of people find very appealing. You can overdrive tape by 3db and it still sounds great. Digital distortion sucks and sounds very irritating to the ear.

      Now that we understand the formats of digital audio we can talk about them to answer your question.

      In a studio each instrument and vocalist usually goes on to their own track. Sometimes backup singers will be recorded together. Sometimes several drums will be recorded into the same microphone. Each engineer has their own methods for recording and mic placement technique.

      Generally these are striped into "tracks", either on tape or in a computer, into a program like protools.

      The sound can then be laid out (arranged) and balances adjusted (individual volumes of each). At this stage, we may sometimes also apply some compression, and sometimes a little EQ to make each instrument and vocalist "sit" in the mix better. This is also the stage at which reverb, echo, or any other effect is introduced to instruments or possibly the whole mix.

      The result of all this is mixed down to a stereo wav file (or stereo analog tape deck). From this point it goes to a mastering engineer who decides how the songs get laid onto the CD. He adjusts the relative volume of the tracks so they are consistent, and applies (sometimes a great deal of) compression to bring up the apparent volume of the track. Record companies are infamous for wanting their cd's to be louder than everyone elses. They push the mastering engineer to overcompress, sometimes resulting in horrible sound quality. (witness U2's last few alblums, great tracks, horrible sounding cd).

      The result of this is a CD, and from the CD an MP3 is ripped and put on a website, or up for sale. Some musicians skip the mastering engineer process. The results are good or bad. Depends on the persons "ear". If you get an mp3 that sounds too "quiet", chances are someone did it themselves or the person that ripped the track was playing with the output volume of the ripper.

      -AC

    38. Re:Someone help me out here.. by elgatozorbas · · Score: 1

      If you compress a single track of a song into an mp3 (or ogg or whatever) does it compress better than compressing multiple tracks mixed together? It's my understanding that the first step of compressing a wav to mp3 is to seperate out all the sound tracks. This being an imprecise process, wouldn't you get better results if the sound tracks were already seperated?

      1) Normally the individual 'tracks' talked about here are the different instruments/singing voices. These are not normally available separately, unless at the reconding studio (and maybe now for this Peter Gabriel thing). There would be no gain in compressing together because they are completely different.

      2) The 'coding tracks together and gain'-thing holds for stereo tracks. The left and right channel are very similar. Forthis reason FM radio transmits a L+R signal (so you can receive it on a mono radio) and also a L-R signal, which is also demodulated by a stereo radio. From these two you can obtain L and R separately. An MP3 encoder therefore offers the possibility to either code L and R separately, or code L+R and L-R separately. Because L and R are likely to be similar, the L-R signal doesn't contain a lot of information and can therefore be compressed more easily.

      3) MP3 compression itself exists of two steps (explained by others here), being:
      - perceptual coding (i.e. separating the sound into different frequency bands and throwing away information you won't hear because your ears are overpowered by the rest).
      - a lossless coding step of the information left after the above step (similar to .zip etc).

    39. Re:Someone help me out here.. by rekoil · · Score: 1

      If you listen to early-to-mid 80's synth music, you'll notice that samples were always drowned in reverb and other processing - this was primarily to "hide" the 8-and-12-bitness of the samplers. Early Art of Noise ("Beatbox", "Close To The Edit") is a great example.

    40. Re:Someone help me out here.. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Yes indeed. Of course, one thing I noticed was that although the Mirage Strings disk sounds a bit cheesy on its own, it sounds pretty lush in a mix, and with a bit of reverb on top to mask the slight loopiness (although all the loops are very clean, there is a distinct repeat on some notes) it's utterly gorgeous - even my Akai S5000-owning proper studio engineer mate agrees!

  7. Monkey cruelty? by Noginbump · · Score: 4, Funny

    Where's PETA when you really need them?

    --
    He who questions training, only trains himself at asking questions. -- The Sphinx, Mystery Men
    1. Re:Monkey cruelty? by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      The monkey might enjoy it.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    2. Re:Monkey cruelty? by fishmasta · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Have we ever really needed PETA?

    3. Re:Monkey cruelty? by pokeyburro · · Score: 1

      When I actually need PETA, then I'll get back to you.

      --
      Lately democracy seems to be based on the skybox, the Happy Meal box, the X-box, and the idiot box.
  8. Shock the monkey? by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

    I really don't like the visual that's giving me.

    (NSFW link)

    --
    Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    1. Re:Shock the monkey? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Two in the Bush, one in the Cheney."

      ROFL

  9. Minding the "P"'s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "The party line for the music industry has been clear: discourage music downloads at all cost. However, singer Peter Gabriel is taking things in a different direction. In order to promote his own label, he is actually encouraging people to not only download his music"

    In other words the copyright holder is giving others permission to do something. Well that certainly beats digitally knocking him over the head, and taking the goods.

    1. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by aeschenkarnos · · Score: 1

      Knocking him over the head? Taking? Somehow I doubt you know how filesharing works.

    2. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Somehow I doubt you know how filesharing works."

      And "somehow", I suspect your literature class didn't have metaphors.

    3. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not fucking shit ones like that they didnt, cuntwad.

    4. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Knocking him in the head was a metaphor for forcing the removal of copying rights from the author. Taking is what you do when you take something that doesn't belong to you.

      Understand now?

    5. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by punkr0x · · Score: 1

      I bet the RIAA will still sue if they find you sharing this song on limewire.

    6. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by aeschenkarnos · · Score: 1
      I "understood" the first time. Your assertion is still stupidly wrong. In copying a file for which one has no copyright permission, nothing occurs that is analogous (or metaphorical) to knocking a person in the head. The copyright holder is vanishingly unlikely to be aware of the copying. Perhaps you can be knocked in the head without noticing, but most folks can't. Further, the physical damage to the person's head and the removal of their wallet are two harms done. The harm done by copyright violation is a theoretical potential reduction in future earnings. In practice of course this reduction is offset by purchase of copies and/or similar products, like the rest of a TV series on DVD, sourced from the copyright holder.

      To "take" something, very importantly, involves its removal, which in the context of files, would be deletion. Unless you've brightly set your operating system up that way--and I'm in no way saying that you haven't--copying and deletion are separate actions.

      You are trying to stretch the loss of an opportunity to be given money (for a copy of a CD; amazingly, the RIAA do not delete the master copies of CDs they produce) into an actual loss of money. The RIAA have spent a lot of time propagandizing to idiots like you to persuade you of their agenda, an agenda which might help them if they can get over the PR backlash, and actually does harm you. These assholes would, if it were in their power, prevent you from letting your friends watch TV shows you have recorded.

      Why the hell are you enabling them?

    7. Re:Minding the "P"'s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The harm done by copyright violation is a theoretical potential reduction in future earnings."

      Apparently slashdot thinks in binary. Why else would you see things as an either/or? There is more than one effect to your cause.

      "In practice of course this reduction is offset by purchase of copies and/or similar products, like the rest of a TV series on DVD, sourced from the copyright holder."

      "In practice" amounts to circumstantial evidence, and flies in the face of the pirate's favourite excuse "I'm not hurting anyone because I never would have bought it anyway".

      "To "take" something, very importantly, involves its removal, which in the context of files, would be deletion."

      Now we see what happens when the layman tries to explain the law to other laymen. Blind leading the blind. You'd know what the flaw was in your argument if you actually read below "0".

      "Why the hell are you enabling them?"

      Why the hell are you looking at the world lopsided? Piracy involes more than just you.

  10. Never thought of it that way... by charlesbakerharris · · Score: 5, Funny
    I'm not downloading pirated music... I'm babysitting kidnapped music!

    I feel better already.

  11. ego by dingDaShan · · Score: 0, Troll

    A star is pleased with himself... Hmm.. sounds like a case of the "Tom Cruises"

  12. So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that anything like punching the monkey?

    Sorry, you knew someone had to ask...

  13. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O/T: I still do not understand the obsession people have with anime. What do the Japanese know about making shitty cartoons that we don't?

  14. So? by svunt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Real musicians (ie not Britney etc) love having their music remixed & worked on by other musicians. If you listen to hiphop, you'll know that everyone lets everyone else play with their beats, lyrics, etc. Honestly, BFD.

    1. Re:So? by Salvance · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sure some artists love it, because they often get paid when the music is used, or at least get credit for the riff/sample. The courts have ruled multiple times that unlicensed sampling is a violate of copyright (for example: Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Demsion Films, 2004). Plus, I don't think most artists have access to all the master tracks when sampling "illegally" ... which is partly why contests/experiments like those of Peter Gabriel and Nine Inch Nails were so interesting.

      Claiming that all "Real" musicians love having the music sampled is a bit overstated ... particularly since the practice seems most common in Rap and Hip Hop.

      --
      Crack - Free with every butt and set of boobs
    2. Re:So? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1, Troll

      "Claiming that all "Real" musicians love having the music sampled is a bit overstated ... particularly since the practice seems most common in Rap and Hip Hop."

      Implying that "real musicians" are involved in Rap and Hip Hop is even more of an overstatement.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:So? by svunt · · Score: 1

      You mean rap, hiphop, IDM, electronica in general, basically any form of music that lends itself to sampling. Really, aside from the very money-laden end of music, artists are pretty happy sharing ideas, just like scientists not caught up in the highly commercial end of their field are happy to share information, or programmers not caught up in the very commercial world of proprietary software. At the end of the day, creative people who aren't making a crapload of money are a very different bvreed to those who are.

    4. Re:So? by PenGun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Rap and Hip Hop are valid genres of musical experesion, you sir are an asshole.

      Disclaimer:
        I turned 60 sept 17th.

          PenGun
        Do What Now ??? ... Standards and Practices !

    5. Re:So? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "you sir are an asshole"

      Maybe, but you sir can't take a joke!

      When it comes to what music I appreciate I'm an old fart who grew up with the beatles, stones, pink floyd, ect. The one Rap singer I like is Eminem, not so much for his music but for the messages and humour it contains, I also appreciate the fact that he introduced the magical talent of Dido to a wide audience.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    6. Re:So? by clickclickdrone · · Score: 1

      >he introduced the magical talent of Dido to a wide audience.
      I thought you said you liked Eminem? ;-)

      --
      I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
    7. Re:So? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      "At the end of the day, creative people who aren't making a crapload of money are a very different bvreed to those who are."

      Yeah, poorer and striving to make a crapload.

    8. Re:So? by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      Ah, so you only like white rappers, then?

      --
      -mkb
    9. Re:So? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      every person I know thay plays music for music sake doesn't mind, as long as the get some credit.
      The people who care are the members of RIAA and people in the business for the sake of money.

      People who do hip hop and rap create a form of music, wether or not you like it. Of course laid on top of that is a poetry with a strong tempo.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:So? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      A white rap champion and a blck golf champion, go-figure huh? /joke

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  15. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by dubiousmike · · Score: 1

    That's a great song, but potentially more difficult to remix into something catchy that Shock the Monkey. Not that I was ever really into that song. I have found that a lot of his best stuff was done with African musicians and that most people never hear any of it.

  16. Results have some merits by Salvance · · Score: 1

    While I agree with most commentors that Peter Gabriel didn't exactly pick his shining accomplishment for the amateur mixers to work with, there were a few "gems" amongst the entries. Here was one of my personal favorites ... who would have thought Carmen and Shock the Monkey would go together so well?

    --
    Crack - Free with every butt and set of boobs
    1. Re:Results have some merits by 7Prime · · Score: 1

      Well, I wouldn't completely be satisfied unless he was able to go back and license Lamb Lies Down on Broadway... but that would mean getting through to Phil Collins, which would be a nightmare.

      --
      Multiplayer Gaming (defined): Sitting around, discussing single-player games with my friends, at the bar.
    2. Re:Results have some merits by kamochan · · Score: 1

      That Carmen mix was indeed brilliant! Good tip, thank you. And a good move from PG. Methinks he (re)gained a fan here.

  17. FYI by dubiousmike · · Score: 1

    We came up with the "Mr. Nice Guy" which is to fold your pinky down, really giving a half-shocker...

    More like surprise the monkey.

  18. Doin' a /. version called, "Spank the Monkey!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Doin' a /. version called, "Spank the Monkey!" You are all invited to partcipate. Hey! I didn't say start already!!

  19. Put your source code where your mouth is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Don't dump your crap into the marketplace and expect the best talent to do your bidding for free."

    Hey! It worked for sourceforge.

  20. Whatever by jfengel · · Score: 1

    It's a well-known song by a well-released artist. Sure, the RIAA could dig some plain-old selling-CDs value out of it, but they've gone to that well plenty of times. So this is as much publicity stunt as artistic endeavor, and it's reaffirming exactly what the RIAA does: promote big acts.

    What the major labels provide to an artist is massive promotion, and this artist has already been promoted. If you want to take down the RIAA, find some ways to connect to brilliant-but-obscure bands that don't have the money for radio air play, posters in Virgin Megastores, etc.

    1. Re:Whatever by fohat · · Score: 1
      and it's reaffirming exactly what the RIAA does: promote big acts.

      Actually I think he's promoting little acts. But hopefully one day they'll be big, big time!

      What the major labels provide to an artist is massive promotion, and this artist has already been promoted.

      They also go after grandmothers that don't own computers.
      I see this as less of a "stunt" and more of a "creative idea using past works", which really sums it up: He's creativly using his control over the copyright of his work to allow others to enhance or diminish it, whichever they prefer. This is one of several steps in the right direction. Back in the middle ages when bards shared songs and roamed the country side, I don't think they were too concerned about copyright. Music wants to be heard. I do agree with you, support the small fry and let the big guys die.
      --
      Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    2. Re:Whatever by kfg · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sure, the RIAA could dig some plain-old selling-CDs value out of it, but they've gone to that well plenty of times. So this is as much publicity stunt as artistic endeavor, and it's reaffirming exactly what the RIAA does: promote big acts.

      Peter Gabriel is British. He has converted a garden shed on his own property into a recording studio where he produces for his own label. He actually runs his own website.

      Yes, he's a big act, but since leaving Genesis he's been as much as possible an independent big act publicly at the forefront of not paying too much mind to copyright issues.

      When his "people" came to him all upset that people in India were pirating his records his response was (paraphrasing):

      "You idiots, book me. If they're not paying for what we're trying to sell they're at least demonstrating a demand for what we can sell that they can't pirate."

      He has a long, personal history of being the good anti-Metallica.

      KFG

    3. Re:Whatever by BBadhedgehog · · Score: 1

      Well that's pretty much what happened for me. Went and read the article, checked out Real World Records, bought a CD by someone I'd never heard of. Went to another record label mentioned in the article that I've never heard of, will go back there and nose around (and probably buy some stuff) later. Seems to work OK from where I'm sat. Regards, Nick

      --
      Will you PLEASE F off with the Fing beta now?
  21. A real answer for people curious about MP3's by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 5, Informative

    They are facinating in how they work, but let me provide a quick laymen explanation:

    First off, your idea that tracks are "seperated" is an understandable mistake! But, the deal is that it's not the tracks that are seperated, it's the component audio frequencies that compose the sound that make up the song that are.

    Let's skip the boring stuff and get right to it. If this interests you, i'm sure that wikipedia will have a full explanation. Imagine three people are whistling (and that this makes up the whole, if somewhat boring, song. Person 1 is whistling at 700hz (hertz, or cycles per second. Human hearing is approx 20-20000 hz, rather like the specs you see on headphones, no coincidence). Person 2 is whistling at 703 hz (NOTE this is close to person 1 on purpose) and person 3 is whistling at 900 hz. So you hear, uncompressed three whistles. There are two things that happen to make an mp3:

    1) If I can analyze this sound to find it's frequency components for a given "window" (or in mp3 speak, frame) of time, i can just record that. It would be easier (smaller) to say Persons 1, 2, 3 are whistling at 700, 703, and 900 then it would be to record the full sound of them doing it (think about that)

    Still, music can be complex, and there are different qualities of MP3 you can make too (usually refered to as bitrate, like 128, 160, 192 Kbps (kilo bits per second) so we have

    2) A principal not unlike optical illusions called Psychoacoustics. It basically says that if you have two signals A and B, and A is louder then B, and A and B are close enough in frequency, a person will only tend to hear A. Common sense time, if a headphone speaker is making a sound, and a big loudspeaker is making the same sound, you'll only hear the big loudspeaker. The question is, how much different will the headphone have to be before you hear it?

    This is the science of psychoacoustics. Basically, the more compressed an mp3 is, the more will be "stripped" out - that is as the bitrate gets lower, the amount seperating A and B is allowed to increase. On the flip side, if the bitrate is high enough, there is no practical difference to the human ear, because you just can't hear such a small difference anyway That's why a high bitrate mp3 is STILL five times smaller then a .wav file with equivalent (for most humans -some one might disagree - i don't) quality.

    Check on fourier transforms, psychoacoustics, and mp3 on wikipedia for more (and if anyone has a better example, well, typed this pretty quick, go for it!)

    .j.

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    1. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Thanks! Relating this back to my question, if you have three tracks and at time X there is a 700hz sound on track 1, a 703hz sound on track 2 and a 900hz sound on track 3 and track 1 is louder than track 2, then isn't it going to be really easy to determine that you can drop the bits from track 2? Easier, than say, trying to detect that a particular waveform in the mix of tracks 1, 2 and 3 was created from three seperate tracks and then determining that that you can drop the sound from track 2 and represent the whole frame as a 700hz signal and a 900hz signal? And, similarly, isn't it likely that a seperation of tracks into individual instruments (as it is usually done in making a recording) will be ameanable to this kind of analysis?

      So, is there tools that already do this? Or is the guy who is trying to encode his own music (which is lying on his harddrive, uncompressed, in seperate instrument tracks) only ever going to get a compressed file which is as good as the d00d running Audio Grabber on a store bought CD?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    2. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, although it may not make sense at first, it's MUCH better to mix them all first. Why? Because you'd have to anyway! That is, if Track A has a frequency at 700 (a blowin sax) and Track B has a frequency of 701 (Jiving flute) but the flute is very soft (for that frame - a very short amount of time, so you can see it might happen alot as the instruments get louder and softer at different times together) then you'd be basically stripping out the 701. The kicker:
      If they aren't mixed together, how would you know you can get rid of the flute for that instant? Now let's not get to specific, when it's all just frequencies, after the math is done, the point is that your best bet for choosing what to take out will occur if everything you want to play can be analyzed together. So nope, that's why they don't have that. Happy to explain this more if i didn't make sense..

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    3. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      And to be clear, Fourier Transforms do just this - they take a complex sound (well, physical sciences use this ALL over the place, but sound will do as an example) and turn them into frequency "slices" so that they say, at time X, we have Frequencies A, B, C at strenghts 1, 2 and 3.

      There are tradeoffs to this - but here's a neat tidbit - The concept of fourier analysis is exatly how your ears work this very instant - your inner ear has "hairs" that vibrate at different frequncies (look it up, its cool) and your mind "recomposes" the stimulus of which hairs are vibrating into a sound you think is unified.

      To be honest, mp3 spring right up from biology, if you understand the way your ear works, it's almost a no-brainer (hindsight, that is ;) )

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    4. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      All I'm saying, is that if you were to combine the mixing process and the compressing process, wouldn't the compressor have more information to play with? Mixing throws away information that the compressor could use, doesn't it?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    5. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      short answer, nope, you'd get no extra info from that. But learning about fourier transform will help you understand that what you are calling "seperated" tracks has nothing to do the idea of seperating frequencies. In short, you'd have 5 seperate mp3's all summed together, with WORSE compression. It's just math man, read up on Fourier (cool stuff, really!) or just trust me. /not that you should ever "just trust me", there is alot of info out there on this //although the conclusion is pretty bulletproof this time

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    6. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your example of two people whistling at 700 Hz and 703 Hz is misleading. I believe you're assuming that since the difference is 3 Hz, and the human ear can only hear Hz greater than 20, that the difference would be inaudible and one could be dropped. But what actually happens is that the two waves will alternatingly compliment and destruct each other, with the net result of a sound around 701.5 Hz coming in and out every 1/3rd of a second. It would basically sound like 3 beeps a second, though more like a siren than a beep. If the waves were at different amplitudes, the same phenomenon would still exist but there would not be complete silence during the destructive phases.

      This gets to the fundamental mistake in your explanation. If MP3s (or more generally, digital music) only stored the most prominant waves, the above phenomenon would not be recorded. The recording would not match the actual sound at all, as the complimentary aspects of sound waves are a big part of what makes music interesting to listen to.

      What actually happens is that the waves are all recorded as one master waveform. The amplitude of this waveform is recorded regularly at very short intervals. For CDs, there are 44,100 recorded points per second. Due to the very small intervals, any waveforms that could not be caught at this fidelity would be due to frequencies so high that they're inaudible. MP3s try to draw the same curve without taking so many recordings. It essentially tries to fit a curve to the master waveform, carefully deciding on which differences would result acceptable errors that are either outside of human hearing or small compared to the other frequencies compositing the wave. There is never a datapoint in either CD or MP3 that says "currently there's a sound at 700 Hz and at 703 Hz." Instead, the only recorded data is where the wave is (in terms of amplitude) and (in the case of MP3s) where the wave is going.

      The parent poster asked about "tracks" and how they're seperated out. I believe this the poster's just using the wrong terminology. What's actually seperated out is the output from the different speakers. These are more accurately called channels. "Tracks" are the output of a specific instrument, and are traditionally stored as two unique channels in recording studios. The bitrate of these channels would match, or exceed, the quality of the end recording. Therefore if a pop song has 16 tracks, it would take 32 channels, all individually stored at high bitrates, to store in an unmixed format. This is a lot more data than distributing the "mixed" version, where all the waveforms are saved together as two channels, and is what is sold at CD stores and as MP3s/AACs.

      I hope this explains things a bit better :). I was actually hoping the Wikipedia article would explain the data portion of the MP3 format, and not just the header. But the above is what I learned from reading the actual technical documentation years ago.

      Jon

    7. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by panaceaa · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty confident that compression would not be improved if the original tracks were available during the compression process. To prove this, think about how MP3s primarily store waves as cosine functions. If one wave is cos(x), and the other is 2cos(x+1), the combined wave will be approximately 2.6cos(x+0.7). If an MP3 encoder encountered 2.6cos(x+0.7), would it benefit from knowing its components? No. The combined wave is what's heard by listeners, and no improvement could be made by considering the component pieces. This is overly simplified, which is why I'm "pretty confident", but I can't think of a situation where the combined wave would be missing valuable frequencies. The only exception would be clipping (combined frequencies above the maximum allowed), in which case the combined frequency would be more relevant than the component frequencies (though the compressor would likely detect the clipping and do the right thing).

    8. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by Retric · · Score: 1

      If you do Fourier Transforms on sources A and B to get X and Y, you can then combine X, and Y to get N.
      However if you combined sources A and B first and then did your Fourier Transform you would also get N. (Within some margin for error.)
      N is at most as complex as X and Y but it is simpler if X and Y share any frequencies.

    9. Re:A real answer for people curious about MP3's by panaceaa · · Score: 1

      I didn't believe we were doing compression on the individual tracks. I thought the question was could a better Fourier transform be created by knowing the original two uncompressed tracks versus the merger of the two uncompressed tracks.

  22. Stupidest phrase ever... by IANAAC · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ..the commercial equivalent of hiring kidnappers to babysit...

    Uh, no. It just letting listeners remix already recorded segments into something they like.

    Really.

    Journalists are stupid. Sometimes.

    1. Re:Stupidest phrase ever... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "Sometimes"?

  23. Re:suck 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a dumbass. He can in no way shape or form use the submitted remixes to generate any revenue without the consent of the person who did it. And to be honest, if he asked me to use one of mine I'd say Yes Please.

  24. Re:suck 2.0 by frankm_slashdot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and that my friend, is the beauty of innovation. if people willingly choose to give him money when he is giving his stuff away for free, than he's doing what we all try to achieve. profit. If thats not what "earning" your money is about, then I'm not sure I know what is.

  25. Not the first by Brenky · · Score: 2, Informative

    As much as I love Peter Gabriel, he isn't the first to release tracks for fans to mix. Barenaked Ladies have also been offering songs from their newest album for people to mix (some of the newly-mixed songs will go on an EP, the proceeds going to charity). Anyways, I think it's great that more popular artists are sticking it to the man, so to speak, and disregarding everything the RIAA wants you to believe. More power to 'em, and if it means rehashing old songs in order to get attention, then so be it. At least they're starting to clue in on the fact that free music does more good than harm (most of the time).

    1. Re:Not the first by GotenXiao · · Score: 1
      Machinae Supremacy (http://www.machinaesupremacy.com/) first started with web release. They're currently signed with Spinefarm Records, and still have the ability to distribute via the web. Also:
      The Underground Edition of REDEEMER was released at the opening of the MACHINAE SUPREMACY webshop (a.k.a The MACHINAESHOP) on March 28th 2006, and the band broke even on the album production costs in only a few hours.

      Download their music. Enjoy.
      --
      Goten Xiao
    2. Re:Not the first by edis · · Score: 1

      As it was noticed elsewhere in comments here, Peter was throwing possibility to toy with fragments of his music long long ago on his game-experience PC CDs. However, there is no point in claiming "getting first there" - creativity is not patented nor disputed kind of activity, lucky circumstance. And naming Peter Gabriel not innovative enough is plain absurd - he always was.

      --
      Servant of karma
    3. Re:Not the first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect he might be one of the first. He first released music for people to remix six or seven years ago. It didn't catch on then. He's just repeating his previous efforts.

  26. Music + Video? by TheStonepedo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I think Peter Gabriel my mind is instantly driven to the video for "Sledgehammer" with the stop motion animated food. With all of the Photoshopping talent online, why should the remix project stop with music alone? Music videos would likely be impressive as well.

    --
    I'll be your candy shop of infinite deliciousity if you'll be my discotheque of endless rump-shaking.
    1. Re:Music + Video? by timerider · · Score: 1

      same here...

      just look at some of the stuff that comes out of the AMV scene...
      (For the outsiders: AMV = Anime Music Video, video clips for music made from snippets of anime shows, and/or with anime characters)
      Any of you remember this elvis title that came out around 2003, and its video clip? someone re-made that with anime characters... pretty impressive if you consider that that person would have had to re-draw it, frame by frame, to get the siluettes of the characters in all those boxes...

    2. Re:Music + Video? by pimpimpim · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Put I pray to god, if there is one, that any user-made video will not consist of screencaps of someone's favorite anime movie, dammit there are too many of those around! :)

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    3. Re:Music + Video? by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      What about screencaps of someone's favourite hentai?

    4. Re:Music + Video? by pimpimpim · · Score: 1
      I just performed some original research on the subject, and I came to the conclusion that...

      no, what a piece of crap! No-one managed to include octopuses, anyway.

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    5. Re:Music + Video? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2, Funny

      Open Source Development: The irrational belief that a group of script kiddies can produce a working program.

      Closed Source Development: The irrational belief that ineffectual middle-management suckups can produce a working program.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    6. Re:Music + Video? by Aabra · · Score: 1

      Ya, just look at the "Star Wars Kid" video remixes to see what kind of incredible potential this has!

  27. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by rolfwind · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    O/T: I still do not understand the obsession people have with anime. What do the Japanese know about making shitty cartoons that we don't?


    Oh, I agree. We know about as more (I'd say even more) about making shitty cartoons than the japanese.

    It's in the area of good ones we need catching up.

    (BTW, the answer here begins in the attitude. Here, it's cartoons, as in primarily for kids, there it is an accepted medium for all kinds of entertainment.)
  28. Maybe, just maybe... by PsychicX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You can see that the actual artists -- the people the RIAA pretend to be protecting -- have repeatedly fallen on our side, supporting file sharing and music communities. They are above the petty business interests and sheer greed that has driven the RIAA to attempt to destroy the music industry.

    With any luck, more artists will start taking these kinds of steps, and eventually the RIAA will not be watching their own dinner from last night being digested.

    1. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by edis · · Score: 1

      Well, some online citizen also expose sheer greed never purchasing items of artists they "love", happy with lossy formats, lossy lives.

      --
      Servant of karma
    2. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Please stop with "Internet rebel/outlaw" crap! It's getting boring...

      If you download music without paying for it, you are breaching copyright, end of story.

      If you want to do something *POSITIVE* against the RIAA, then don't give them the justification for putting DRM on everything (which they say are anti-piracy measures). Don't copy it and don't buy it, unless you *TRULY* feel that the product is worth the money being asked for it. Or buy all your music in second-hand shops.

      All the "file sharers" and "music communities" do is make it worse for honest customers like me who have to put up with copy-protection and over-priced CDs that subsidise your theft.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    3. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by dylan_- · · Score: 1
      and over-priced CDs that subsidise your theft
      Are you under the impression that CD prices would fall if piracy was impossible?

      They would rise, of course. Think about it.
      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    4. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If you download music without paying for it, you are breaching copyright, end of story.
      Mostly true.
      All the "file sharers" and "music communities" do is make it worse for honest customers like me who have to put up with copy-protection and over-priced CDs that subsidise your theft.
      Untrue. DRM is something the companies want in order to force you to pay for the same thing multiple times and filesharing is just the excuse.
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    5. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Are you under the impression that CD prices would fall if piracy was impossible?

      Not directly, no. But if everyone was to be a bit more discerning and thought about the "value" of things before parting with their hard-earned cash or pirating stuff, the prices would have to be set by the demand - i.e. you couldn't keep charging £15 for a CD if no-one was buying them.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    6. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      Oh, I quite agree. I guess people really do want these £15 CDs though as they seem to sell pretty well. However I still fail to see how you're subsidising the file-sharers. Surely they're keeping the prices down for you? (whether such file-sharing is ethical is another matter)

      ps I hate to be a total pedant, but someone will inevitably point it out, so it might as well be me: kung-fu is Chinese, not Japanese.

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    7. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Untrue right back at ya. Look at the timeline and tell me if the chicken or the egg came first.

    8. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Oh, I quite agree. I guess people really do want these £15 CDs though as they seem to sell pretty well.

      I'm not so sure they are selling so well. Assuming your a Brit like me, you can't have failed to notice the constant "Sales" in the high street shops these days, the record shops in particular. I think Virgin and HMV are starting to realise that they've had it far too good for far too long and are showing signs of reducing some of their over-inflated prices. Five years ago, a "Sale" in any shop this close to Christmas was unheard of.

      However I still fail to see how you're subsidising the file-sharers. Surely they're keeping the prices down for you? (whether such file-sharing is ethical is another matter).

      That's just economics (as much as a geek like me understands economics anyway). Everything is priced based on the potential loss to be made from the product being incorporated into it's final price - for example, part of the, say, £1000 price tag of a brand new LCD TV takes into account the fact that 1 in 10 of them will be faulty, come back as a return which will then get junked, or repaired and sold off cheaply.

      Likewise, the price of a CD must include what is lost due to file sharing - sure, if the file sharing stops, the greedy record companies aren't going to automatically reduce their prices but at least then you've taken away one of their excuses and have an easier job of exposing them to be the price-fixing bastards that they are.

      As to the sig, yep, it's been said before - perhaps I should change "Japanese" to "Oriental"...

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    9. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by zolaris · · Score: 1

      The egg, chickens aren't the only things that lays eggs.

    10. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by smoker2 · · Score: 1
      Also:

      If there were no internet piracy, the *IAA would find it necessary to invent it.

      If there were no terrorism, the govt. would find it necessary to invent it.

      It's easier to control peoples thinking when you have an enemy to "protect" them from.
      Even more so when the enemy is ficticious, because there is no way you can protect yourselves from a faceless, formless demon - only high powered organisations with specialist knowledge can do that. (See Religion)

    11. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by dylan_- · · Score: 1
      Yup, I'm a Brit too.

      Everything is priced based on the potential loss to be made from the product being incorporated into it's final price - for example, part of the, say, £1000 price tag of a brand new LCD TV takes into account the fact that 1 in 10 of them will be faulty, come back as a return which will then get junked, or repaired and sold off cheaply.
      Yes, for LCD TVs, but not for CDs. There's competition in the LCD TV market so they have to try and sell it as cheaply as possible (not always true, but generally). But there's no competition in the CD market. If the Sony LCD TV was ridiculously overpriced, you'd just buy the cheaper Panasonic instead, but say you're a big U2 fan, when you go to buy one of their CDs you don't say, "Whoa! Fifteen quid! No way, I'm getting that cheaper Backstreet Boys CD instead."

      Nope, if you want a U2 CD you have no choice: you have to buy it from one company. Therefore, they're under no pressure to sell it at a reasonable price: they'll sell it at the maximum the market will bear (if they set it too high, no one will buy it). Oops, nearly forgot, there is one other supplier...you might decide that, say, £25 is just far too much and decide to download it. Therefore they need to keep the price reasonable enough that you won't just decide to break the law. File-sharers are, therefore, keeping the price down for you.

      at least then you've taken away one of their excuses and have an easier job of exposing them to be the price-fixing bastards that they are.
      Well, it's not exactly price-fixing (though they are bastards ;-) They don't have to agree with other companies to set their prices at a certain level because they each hold monopolies on their particular bands.
      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    12. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      A very interesting argument!

      But what about brand names? Sony and Panasonic price their products based on the fact that Joe Bloke believes their products are in some way better. So if you're a U2 fan buying the next (over-priced) U2 CD, are you any different than Joe Bloke buying an (over-priced) Sony TV because you happen to like Sony products?

      And as to that "one company" statement - if you manufacture something then you need retailers to buy it from you in bulk. Therefore, you need to sell it cheap enough to retailers to get them to buy as many as possible. But the retailers will only stock what they think they can sell, and if their selling fewer copies because of P2P, then the price they buy it in for, and ultimately sell it for, is higher.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    13. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by dylan_- · · Score: 1
      But what about brand names? Sony and Panasonic price their products based on the fact that Joe Bloke believes their products are in some way better. So if you're a U2 fan buying the next (over-priced) U2 CD, are you any different than Joe Bloke buying an (over-priced) Sony TV because you happen to like Sony products?
      Well, yes, I was oversimplifying. Products are sold with the same components under different badges, and they'll charge the higher price for the "name". But it is different. A Sony and a Panasonic (or whatever brands you choose) would both be seen as quality, so if one was substantially cheaper than the other you'd tend to go for the cheaper one. There is real competition there. However, it wouldn't make any difference what the price difference was between the Backstreet Boys and the U2 album if I don't want or like the BB stuff (in reality they could be giving the CDs away for free and I still wouldn't take them :-)

      you manufacture something then you need retailers to buy it from you in bulk. Therefore, you need to sell it cheap enough to retailers to get them to buy as many as possible
      Umm...no...they don't care about the actual cost, they care about their profit margin. They'd buy CDs for £400 a go, if they could sell them for £450.

      But the retailers will only stock what they think they can sell, and if their selling fewer copies because of P2P, then the price they buy it in for, and ultimately sell it for, is higher.
      I'm not sure I understand what you're saying here as it appears to contridict what you said earlier. But anyway, no, it doesn't change. The actual cost of physically making the CD is negligible (maybe a pound or so). After that the price is purely based on what will produce the most money. For example, imagine the record company and retailer predicted that CD sales of "U2's Greatest B-sides" were going to drop by 10% due to P2P. Would they raise the price from £15 to £20? No, because they'd make less money as the number of people put off buying it would exceed the extra £5 they would gain per copy. £15 was chosen because it was the point where it made them the most money and that remains true regardless. There's no other market pressure on the price except that people might just decide to risk P2P instead.

      If there was no way to pirate their music they would figure that more people would buy their CD, or at least the same number would (after all, it's the only way to get it) and they could safely raise the price to £20 (making some daft excuse to keep the punters happy). Producing in bulk only lowers prices if there's competition and copyright law produces monopolies instead. P2P puts (illegal) pressure on these monopolies though and that's what keeps their prices down.
      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    14. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      Well, shall we just agree on the media companies being monopolistic, thieving bastards then? :-)

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    15. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, no argument on that one! :-)

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    16. Re:Maybe, just maybe... by fithmo · · Score: 1
      If you download music without paying for it, you are breaching copyright, end of story.

      Unless the artist gives you permission to, as in the case of this instance/article you're replying to.

  29. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by Drgnkght · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    On the off chance that your question is a serious one, I'll try to explain. The primary difference between American cartoons and Japanese cartoons is, in my opinion at least, the target audience. American society views cartoons as intended for children. Most of the cartoons produced here in the states are simple and devoid of anything that might offend parents. You will never see Disney (or any other domestic cartoon studio) release anything like "Ninja Scroll", "Slayer", or "Demon City Shinjuku". They're not child-safe. (Remember cartoons are for children.)

    This isn't the case with the Japanese cartoons, which is why most fans of anime that I've personally met refer to it as anime instead of Japanese cartoons. The material will range from silly (Photon, Dragon Half) to serious (Jin-Roh, Ghost in the Shell, Last Exile). There are also scores of romantic comedies usually these involve a love triangle of some sort, i.e. Lum, Ranma 1/2, Vandread, Love Hina. There is something for just about any interest imaginable. (La Blue Girl comes to mind. Ick.) This isn't to say that there isn't anime intended for children because there is. It just isn't the focus of the genre.

    In short, anime doesn't walk on eggshells.

  30. As have The Beastie Boys and Fatboy Slim by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    no text here

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  31. "Spanking the Monkey" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of shocking the monkey, try "spanking the monkey".

    1. Re:"Spanking the Monkey" by ChimaObialo · · Score: 1

      I prefer to spank this monkey.

  32. Re:suck 2.0 by kiwoneka · · Score: 1

    my good sir you could not begin to appriciate good music if you heard it.
    i will send you a copy of Paris Hilton's greatest hits

  33. Math folks might like this SONG about Fourier by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

    this was too much, found it a few days ago:

    http://eceserv0.ece.wisc.edu/~sethares/mp3s/fourie r.html

    You just can't make this stuff up! here's the text, reproduced, but as my friend said, it puts Weird Al to shame (sorry Al!), the song itself sounds really, really good! So, this is your Nerd Moment of Zen for the Week (for sure!):

    Table 4.1: Properties of the Fourier Transform
    (or, Fourier's Song)

    Integrate your function times a complex exponential
    It's really not so hard you can do it with your pencil
    And when you're done with this calculation
    You've got a brand new function - the Fourier Transformation
    What a prism does to sunlight, what the ear does to sound
    Fourier does to signals, it's the coolest trick around
    Now filtering is easy, you don't need to convolve
    All you do is multiply in order to solve.

    From time into frequency - from frequency to time

    Every operation in the time domain
    Has a Fourier analog - that's what I claim
    Think of a delay, a simple shift in time
    It becomes a phase rotation - now that's truly sublime!
    And to differentiate, here's a simple trick
    Just multiply by J omega, ain't that slick?
    Integration is the inverse, what you gonna do?
    Divide instead of multiply - you can do it too.

    From time into frequency - from frequency to time

    Let's do some examples... consider a sine
    It's mapped to a delta, in frequency - not time
    Now take that same delta as a function of time
    Mapped into frequency - of course - it's a sine!

    Sine x on x is handy, let's call it a sinc.
    Its Fourier Transform is simpler than you think.
    You get a pulse that's shaped just like a top hat...
    Squeeze the pulse thin, and the sinc grows fat.
    Or make the pulse wide, and the sinc grows dense,
    The uncertainty principle is just common sense.

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
  34. Hip Hop != Rap (I am a programmer, listen to me!!) by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

    I only said that to get your attention, maybe a little cred. I doubt that most folks around here have even HEARD hiphop - although the radio has soaked you all in rap, for sure.

    To quote the immortal KRS-One: Rap is something you do, Hip-Hop is something you live.

    I mean it, hip hop is barely a music format, it is more of a mindset that has NOTHIN' but NOTHIN' to do with the music you hear today. Really Really. Here is a underground tip for otherwise plaid slashdotters.. and an album i wish EVERYONE owned, which will prove the point: Aceyalone's Book Of Human Language .

    After you listen to that, let's have this discussion again. We can go over the Four Elements. Maybe over the still cooling body of Clear Channel, if we can arrange it ;)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_elements_of_hip_ hop (wikipedia, you shine tonight)

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
  35. This is how it should be by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Freedom to create derivative works. Freedom to distribute. Freedom to use as you see fit. No copyright nonsense.

    The good thing: it is inevitable that we deal away with copyright. Modern exchange of information demands it (read, networking in the sense of distributing information based on the network model, as opposed to the broadcast model). The information exchange is much more powerful than the copyright law, and it is only bound to get stronger as networking is more and more part of everyday life. The first signs are already apparent. We've got a company called Google who is most likely among the biggest copyright infringers on the world, operating freely. Why? Because Google provides an essential service. To index information, thus make information accessible. Furthermore not only it is an essential service, but it is _good_ for content creators aswell. The fundamental clash is this: copyright and networking is incompatible. Networking/nature is not aware of copyright and can't be made aware of, because copyright itself is a fuzzy, arbitary and ultimately conflicting view on information. Copyright is the 8 ton gorilla. Networking is the 8000 ton meteorite. Networking is simply so useful that we're not going to give it up and networking cannot be fixed to obey copyright law. Copyright is not only detrimental to an information society, it is not needed and ultimately incompatible with future technological advancement. Networking implies free flow of information and creating derivative works. So like it or not: copyright goes away.

    The bad thing: it is likely to be a long, slow process and change is only going to come when the situation becomes really, really unworkable.

    The outcome: content creators will get paid for creating the given work, but won't be given a tax and monopoly on distribution for x amount of time. This is how most people would expect to get paid for a job. After all, why is it that while creating and printing a book in the 18th century was much more expensive and longer, the copyright law guaranteed less benefits for the authors than it does now. We're simply rewarding content creators too much for too little work.

    Of course you could argue that copyright provides incentive. But this is a false argument. The correct way to phrase that is: copyright provides income, which is the incentive. Now, you might argue that in the 18th century, copyright was the most straightforward way to provide that income to content creators, but today it ain't so. Again, our wonderful networking age obsoleted copyright on that field. It is now possible to setup a worldwide micropayment system on the internet (it is just a matter of time until someone implements it), to sponsor the creation of most works. Still, you could say, what about big budget movies? Well, what about them. There will be companies willing to finance the creation of the movie just like now (of course actors would be paid fixed sums of money as royalties won't exist) and they'd make profit not from the copyright fees coming from distributing the work, but from using the given content to sell their product. Tv stations already do this, they give away movies for no financial compensation so that you watch the advertisements their income is from. Just from now on, your movies ticket would pay for the experience you're given in the cinema, not the copyright fees. People would still go to the cinema, but cinemas would actually have to compete on the best viewing experience, not at what you're actually able to view.

    It might sound strange, but from a certain viewpoint, advertisements have it right: they are the means, not the end. As in, they exist as means for companies to influence you, not because they want to make a profit on advertisements. The profit is indirect. If all content would be used like that commercially: to help sell a product (cinema seets, a book, etc), as in not as advertisement, but as a necessary component, then we wouldn't have to pay outrageous profits to media cartells, just what they des

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:This is how it should be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a fair, free market competitive profit on their actual work (initial cost of creating the given work + negligible distribution costs)
       
      That's not profit, that's break-even. Otherwise agree, just wanted to nitpick.

  36. More accurate explanation by panaceaa · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your example of two people whistling at 700 Hz and 703 Hz is misleading. I believe you're assuming that since the difference is 3 Hz, and the human ear can only hear Hz greater than 20, that the difference would be inaudible and one could be dropped. But what actually happens is that the two waves will alternatingly compliment and destruct each other, with the net result of a sound around 701.5 Hz coming in and out every 1/3rd of a second. It would basically sound like 3 beeps a second, though more like a siren than a beep. If the waves were at different amplitudes, the same phenomenon would still exist but there would not be complete silence during the destructive phases.

    This gets to the fundamental mistake in your explanation. If MP3s (or more generally, digital music) only stored the most prominant waves, the above phenomenon would not be recorded. The recording would not match the actual sound at all, as the complimentary aspects of sound waves are a big part of what makes music interesting to listen to.

    What actually happens is that the waves are all recorded as one master waveform. The amplitude of this waveform is recorded regularly at very short intervals. For CDs, there are 44,100 recorded points per second. Due to the very small intervals, any waveforms that could not be caught at this fidelity would be due to frequencies so high that they're inaudible. MP3s try to draw the same curve without taking so many recordings. It essentially tries to fit a curve to the master waveform, carefully deciding on which differences would result acceptable errors that are either outside of human hearing or small compared to the other frequencies compositing the wave. There is never a datapoint in either CD or MP3 that says "currently there's a sound at 700 Hz and at 703 Hz." Instead, the only recorded data is where the wave is (in terms of amplitude) and (in the case of MP3s) where the wave is going.

    The parent poster asked about "tracks" and how they're seperated out. I believe this the poster's just using the wrong terminology. What's actually seperated out is the output from the different speakers. These are more accurately called channels. "Tracks" are the output of a specific instrument, and are traditionally stored as two unique channels in recording studios. The bitrate of these channels would match, or exceed, the quality of the end recording. Therefore if a pop song has 16 tracks, it would take 32 channels, all individually stored at high bitrates, to store in an unmixed format. This is a lot more data than distributing the "mixed" version, where all the waveforms are saved together as two channels, and is what is sold at CD stores and as MP3s/AACs.

    I hope this explains things a bit better :). I was actually hoping the Wikipedia article would explain the data portion of the MP3 format, and not just the header. But the above is what I learned from reading the actual technical documentation years ago.

    Jon

    ps. Sorry for the original post as AC, but I don't want this post to be buried at 0 moderation.

    1. Re:More accurate explanation by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      I actually did learn something from your post, yes indeed!, and that as a cSound programmer who uses this stuff quite a bit. Still, it wouldn't go down the laymen's throat a'tall.. it's pretty complex for the average musician to begin with and i'm 'close enough'.

      That said, my understanding of MP3's comes more from the biology of the human ear then it does the mathematics behind it, so cheers!

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    2. Re:More accurate explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You are all complete idiots and do not know how MP3 compression works. I cannot belive this trash got modded up.
      You in particular have just mixed up HZ and KHZ and injected more bullshit like "It essentially tries to fit a curve to the master waveform".

      Perceptual encoding is much more complicated than that.
      It actually performs an FFT analysis and split the sound up into it's component sine waves.
      Then, two methods are used to discard data.
      Both known as perceptual masking. The first method deals with frequency masking, the second with time.
      Human auditory perception cannot hear a quiet frequency when there is a louder one within a few hz of it.
      So, you can discard all of them.
      Humans cannot hear a quiet sound when a louder one immediately follows it. (Think of a bass drum, you do not hear the squeak of the pedal just before the beater hits.)
      So you can discard all those too.

      The watery effect of heavy MP3 compression is from too many transients being discarded by the second method, so the transients appear spread over time. The thin lack of depth is due to too many frequencies being discarded.

      "the net result of a sound around 701.5 Hz coming in and out every 1/3rd of a second. It would basically sound like 3 beeps a second, though more like a siren than a beep. If the waves were at different amplitudes, the same phenomenon would still exist but there would not be complete silence during the destructive phases."

      This is crap. The cancellation has ALREADY HAPPENED when the waveforms were mixed before you do the MP3 compression. So you just need to compress the result, not the individual tones.
      Also, it will sound like an amplitude tremelo, not a siren which would imply pitch modulation.

    3. Re:More accurate explanation by Frogg · · Score: 1

      (i'm not very technical when it comes to audio, so some of my terminology may be slightly incorrect.)

      having two sounds of similar but different frequencies, say 700hz and 703hz will appear to the ear as a sound of "about" 700hz -- but with an audible oscillating 'wahwahwah' sound of 3hz (the difference between the two frequencies) heard as well - this is the siren-like sound you describe in your first paragraph.

      this is the same as the effect you get when tuning guitar strings using harmonics: you fire off (pluck) the same harmonic note on two strings, and, when the strings are not tuned correctly, one hears a 'wahwahwah' sound (denoting the difference between each pitch), and, as you bring the two strings more into tune (by twisting a tuning peg) the audible 'wahwahwah' will slow down (there will be less difference between the two pitches) until it disappears.

      i don't know how my above explanation helps explain what's happening when one compresses sound into an mp3, but i figured the my real-world example is connected in some way to what you describe, and may be of use to someone.

      but maybe not... who knows?

    4. Re:More accurate explanation by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Nice attitude.

      Being rude doesn't mean your good at anything.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:More accurate explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shut the fuck up, asshole.

  37. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The japanese know PLENTY about making shitty cartoons, trust me.

  38. Eno & Byrne - My life in the bush of ghosts by mistigri · · Score: 2, Informative

    Same on the dedicated website http://bush-of-ghosts.com/remix/bush_of_ghosts.htm ; you can upload your remixes, which are then made available inline with the Creative Commons licenses.

  39. Afro-Celts by cruachan · · Score: 1

    The Afro-Celt Sound System - also on Real World records - did something similar several years ago, although the tracks were distributed with a Flash remixer so I'm not sure how open they actually were.

    1. Re:Afro-Celts by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      Volume 2 of that series is actually a favorite of mine... "when i'm falling" is excellent and North 1&2 i've even spun out at parties...

      Just a ++recommendation on that (or me too! if you prefer :))

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    2. Re:Afro-Celts by cruachan · · Score: 1

      Oh definatly on of my top 10 favourite bands. What is somewhat suprising is that after 10 years I'm not aware of anyone else doing anything similar of the same quality, although on a somewhat more traditional note Shooglenifty (http://www.shoogle.com/) are pretty good and truly excellent live.

      I think the AfroCelt app was called Noodle - they did a couple of versions with different tracks and was great and fun waste of time to play around with.

    3. Re:Afro-Celts by LOTHAR,+of+the+Hill · · Score: 1

      And who is the publisher? Peter Gabriel!!

      I really like everything that guy is done, except some of his music. Everyhting he does, lives, and breathes, is about music. He makes it more accessible. He promotes new artists. He promotes international music. He funded a money losing travelling international music festival, a la Lollapalooza, for ten years just to bring exposure to artists and music from differnet countries.

  40. Whatever-FOSSTrack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If you want to take down the RIAA, find some ways to connect to brilliant-but-obscure bands that don't have the money for radio air play, posters in Virgin Megastores, etc."

    Have them all do the soundtrack to F/OSS games. That'll make them big time in no time.

  41. My World:By A beautiful Mind-a novel in six books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Oh Lord! Another one. The only thing you've produced is a long post that no one would pay to read. When you're actually a content creator that people will pay. THEN you can start telling us what copyright, and content creation is all about. Not some unknown with a hidden agenda.

  42. Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember when the RIAA had artists quotes about piracy, PG's quote was very noncommital, and din't condem anyone. I forget the exact quote, but it was something like "it is a deeply troubling issue"

  43. Didn't Todd Rundgren do this a LONG time ago? by sgant · · Score: 1

    He put out a CD quite a while ago, like 10 years or something, called "No World Order" that encouraged people to remix it.

    Anyone remember that?

    --

    "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
    1. Re:Didn't Todd Rundgren do this a LONG time ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes indeedy. It came out in 1993 and was the first music-only interactive CD (if not the first interactive CD overall - I can't remember). It was for Macs and PCs as well as the Philips CD-I technology. Unfortunately for Windows users, the software didn't work at all in Windows 95, but I'm still keeping my copy.

      As a big fan of his, I'd be remiss to not mention his other firsts, as he is truly a music geek:

      - First interactive live television concert (was a now defunct two way system)
      - First live concert broadcast nationwide over radio
      - First live concert broadcast nationwide over cable (simultaneously broadcast over radio as well)
      - First music video contaning live action and computer graphics
      - First paint software that used a graphics tablet (he licensed it to Apple)
      - One of the first Enhanced CDs

      This information and more can be found at either his wikipedia entry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rundgren) and the leading fan site (http://trconnection.com/trbio.html).

  44. Not just web release, but tracks... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The thing that is kind of new here is bands releasing songs as tracks - so you can have just a vocal track, or a base guitar track and mix in other things as you like. It's not just being able to download songs from the web...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  45. Re:My World:By A beautiful Mind-a novel in six boo by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

    Sorry dude. I actually live by my opinion. I get paid for writing (~ creating) GPL code.

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
  46. What an idiot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you mix all the tracks together, you get 16 bit resolution. However, the proportion of that value from any one track mixed must necessarily be a number not representable accurately by a 16-bit figure.

    If you've originally mixed 10% of one track in, how do you bring it forward? Multiply the whole mix by 5%?

    If the tracks are separate, you mix the numbers and add the result together. The result will have peaks bigger than the 16-bit maximum and you normalise the result to fit within the envelope needed.

    So you need the tracks separately.

  47. This is not quite, however, the way it will be by zuki · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I sincerely wish that this was something which could be solved so easily.

    Your argument is interesting, but after further examination, somewhat akin to early Communist and Socialist economic models. It looks good on paper, but might not really manage to create a situation where many content creators would be motivated to do so, or even in a position where they could make the commitment of both time and resources necessary for them to come up with the music at the level of sophistication that a Peter Gabriel album does when it is conceived, written, played, recorded, produced, mixed and mastered. This in turn could lead to the kind of long-term and endemic paucity of outstanding creative works in a similar fashion to that which ended happening in the former Soviet Union with their economic policies.

    There are far many more complex and entertwined issues to this dilemna, and while I wholeheartedly agree that current copyright issues are increasingly antiquated and will likely slowly disappear in their present form, there are many reasons why this particular approach will probably not be adopted as law. Mind you, the 'de facto' result at the street level today is already so completely out of hand, that it may make less and less of a difference anyway, as it has proven utterly impossible to police and regulate. Major Hip-Hop artists make no bones about selling bootleg 'mixtapes' by the bucketload as part of their viral marketing strategies, everyone and their sister can create instant mashups which besides being difficult to even recognize, make it utterly impossible for anyone to try and collect royalties from, so in a sense the result is pretty much the same. But consequently and already noticeable, many contemporary artists have reduced the amount of time they can afford to spend in the studio crafting recording masterpieces which no one will buy in great numbers, choosing to instead put out slighty more 'average' albums and dedicate their time and energies to performing live, which for many has proven to be a reliable way to help to pay the bills...

    As a whole, it is quite flattering to see that someone like Peter Gabriel (who besides being a legendary performer, also has consistently tried to further his participation to the global music community, with his World Music festival (WOMAD), Real World recording studio complex, as well as through his record label which is supporting many great, unknown but talented artists.) doing something that few have dared to try in order to stay relevant. Kudos all the way!!

    Z.

    1. Re:This is not quite, however, the way it will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I sincerely wish that this was something which could be solved so easily."

      Maybe because no one around here REALLY wants to "solve the problem" because that actually involves WORK! Work in understanding the other side. What it means to be someone who's livelyhood DEPENDS on creating IP.* Most of the people here either have never created anything that consumers would pay for, or they have another source of income that's not susceptible to piracy. A majority of the comments are ignorant. (couple facts. one Peter Gabrial runs his OWN company. Two Peter Gabrial AS THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER has given permission. Three Peter Gabrial's company isn't REPRESENTED by the RIAA). The present system while not perfect is better than any suggestion I've seen so far, and it has generated results that the majority of consumers feel is worth it. Something that can't be said for any idea floating around here. Also as I pointed out previously, I find it a hypocritical stance to chastise people for not being dilligent, and doing their civic duty. e.g. "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." and yet the present situation not only arose, but continues to propogate exactly because of the same attitude. What do we have so far? A bunch of ideas that either will not work, do not scale, or leaves someone out of the picture (usually because the poster has a grudge, or is just plain apathetic). Yeah! What Peter is doing is nice, but it is happenning within the present system AND the fact that it's happenning without benefit of all these "pie in the sky" ideas that slashdot's famous for tells you that things aren't as dire as people (with hidden agendas) paint it.

      *That doesn't apply here because most EMPLOYEE'S livelyhood isn't affected by piracy. Just their bosses.

  48. Re:News for Nerds by AndyboyH · · Score: 2, Informative

    dude, Peter Gabriel performs with Zorb balls and Segways on stage.
    He's as much a nerd as the rest of us!

    Some may not like his music, but he's a shrewd musician and his performances are always spectacular.

    The best idea I've ever seen in the music business as well, was that he released the audio from the concert on CD. So for each concert, in each major city, there's a CD recording the night. It's not edited clips or 'the best bits' - it's local hecklers and the bits where he gets his tongue tied doing a link to his next song recorded directly from the mixing desk - it helps you recall the night you experienced in your local arena/city hall, not the night someone else experienced in the Texas Dome, or whatever.

    --
    Baka Drew
  49. Could this be... by hallux-s · · Score: 1

    Open Source Music? It might sound like...
    "... you know you've gotta SHOCK the monkey, yeah yeah, shock the monkey, shock shock shock..."
    "This song is distributed under the mGPL, and may be freely redistributed subject to the following conditions..."
    (Or would it be more like a BSD-ish license?)
    ;-)
    hallux-s

    1. Re:Could this be... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 2, Informative

      Creative Commons. There are a variety of licenses not designed for software from this group.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  50. Re:suck 2.0 by endemoniada · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We recently read about something quite similar here in Sweden. An artist had found out that someone had downloaded a bootleg copy of a song he mostly performed live, remixed it and released it onto the internet crowds. When said artist found the song, he released it as his own on his new album. This was an excellent way to show how piracy _really_ works. It's not destructive. It's not anti-artistic. It won't hurt anyone if you don't take it so bloody damn serious!

    --
    Blog -
  51. Leave it! by pandrijeczko · · Score: 0, Troll
    In my day, they mixed the music right the *FIRST TIME* without having to constantly remix it...

    Look, I'm a big Genesis and Peter Gabriel fan, and I raise my hat to him for doing the "Open Source thing" with his music.

    But I *REALLY AM* getting sick and tired of these idiots who constantly think they can do a better job than the original artist in making his/her/their songs sound better - either through making some plasticized dance-beat cover version or just cutting the original into bits and having some rap bloke talk all over it.

    And don't even talk to me about "tribute bands" - if they're clever enough to copy the original artist that well, they're clever enough to write their own original music and work their way up from playing pubs and clubs - just like The Rolling Stones and The Beatles had to do.

    Please, go and mess about with your modern music as much as you like and do it with my blessing. But with regard to the stuff I've been listening to now for anything up to 35 years, *LEAVE IT ALONE*!!! It didn't need some kid calling himself a "DJ" messing about with it then so it doesn't need it now.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    1. Re:Leave it! by zeruch · · Score: 1

      It isn't necessarily about doing a "better job" than the original artist, but taking their own interpretive roll with it. It is akin to the common practice in jazz of taking standards and wringing all manner of new permutations of them in performance or recording (everyone knows Monk's "Straight No Chaser", but it keeps getting recorded in a growing body of fresh takes; the melody is timeless, and people gravitate towards that and find things they can use to build their own takes on).

      Sampling and such goes back all the way to the musique concrete of the 1940s and 50s, and tape loops and found sounds have been part and parcel of the musical landscape for quite some time, so this is far from a new idea.

    2. Re:Leave it! by djwoodard · · Score: 1

      Aside from what the others have mentioned, you are forgetting that the Beatles and Stones started out covering blues & R&B artists while they were working "their way up from playing pubs and clubs...."

      Possibly there is some value to copying the originals?

    3. Re:Leave it! by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Aside from what the others have mentioned, you are forgetting that the Beatles and Stones started out covering blues & R&B artists while they were working "their way up from playing pubs and clubs...."

      Agreed, but then it's an interpretation of the original, not a direct copy. If you're a guitarist who was inspired by, say, Muddy Waters, I don't see a problem with covering a few of his songs. Go a stage further than that and become a tribute band that tries to be a direct copy of the original, yes it takes some skill to do that but then you've sanitised your own capabilities and originality as a result.

      As regards taking the original recording and playing about with it, anyone with enough time and a bit of computer software can do it - so I fail to see what "musicianship" is involved in that process.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    4. Re:Leave it! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      and while we're at it, we should stop painters from using the same colors used in other portaits.

      I am 42, and I am not nearly as curmudgany as you, sheesh.

      It's not like there taking away the songs, there craeting something new with them,.
      You would have a point if a remixed song destryed the original, never to be seen again, but that's not the case.

      You take something that has gotten old and make it young again. Personally, I like the concept. Do I find remixs trhat suck to me? sure, but I also find new ideas, and interesting interpetations.

      I find it interesting that some creating something new makes you "Sick and Tired". You might want to see a doctor about that.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Leave it! by dthree · · Score: 1
      As regards taking the original recording and playing about with it, anyone with enough time and a bit of computer software can do it - so I fail to see what "musicianship" is involved in that process."

      Thats just silly. There is a whole range of skills required just to take the samples and that "bit of computer software" to produce something of high quality, then on top of that is the creative mindset to make it something that is interesting and enjoyable to listen to. Just because people aren't plucking strings or blowing in a mouthpiece doesn't mean it doesn't take skill or musicianship. I'm sure there are a lot of bad remixes too, but there is always a lot of crap in any art form - it doesn't make the good stuff any less worthy.

      Also, I thought I would mention that there was a lot of remixers in the "Shock the Monkey" contest sang and played instruments for their remixes, so it wasn't just a bunch of people twiddling samples in software.

      I don't think you should try to speak for all musicians when you say that they don't want or need their songs to be remixed. Some may not, but certainly not all of them and unless an artist's label is commissioning remixes against the artists' wishes, there has to be SOME sort of artist agreement for published remixes.
      --
      "I forgot my mantra."
  52. As Peter Gabriel and Metallica, respectively, show by Atario · · Score: 1

    ...some people get it and others don't.

    --
    "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
  53. Ummm okay your a little off base by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

    How is some one releasing a library under the LGPL and then another bloke using that library for another app different then the modern remix?

    Your not upset about remixing, your upset about the general quality (at times). Trust me on this. //ain't no different then dumb code - don't DL it!!

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    1. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      How is some one releasing a library under the LGPL and then another bloke using that library for another app different then the modern remix?

      What kind of analogy is that??? A piece of music is more like a historical document - it's a statement about something that was going through the artist's mind at the time it was recorded. At that moment in time, it was produced and mixed as well as it oculd be, that's how it should be left... By *YOUR* analogy, we should go to the original written documents of, say, Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" and rewrite all the "s" characters in the text in crayon, purely because in those days they looked more like "f" characters!!!

      Surely a software library is originally *written* with the view that it will probably be changed and enhanced.

      A *TERRIBLE* analogy, I'm afraid...

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Your analogy only works if by remixing you lose the original. Something that doesn't happen. But I doubt there are very many printed versions which have the 's' that looks like an 'f'.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    3. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mate,

      i won't use analogies. i'll tell you how it is.

      you're an idiot... us artists love having our music remixed.

      theres so many ideas and styles that we have and it's sad that in the end we can only release one original version.. but through remixes which we artists ourselves commision, we make our music accessible to different people and different environments.

      just because you don't know where to look for good remixes or music doesn't mean you should piss on countless hard working souls.

      -Sj53

    4. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      us artists love having our music remixed.

      Actually, it's "we artists" but aside from that, so just how many Platinum Selling albums *have* you made then, Sparky?

      theres so many ideas and styles that we have and it's sad that in the end we can only release one original version..

      Again, it would always be nice to see some punctuation and capitalisation but, aside from that also, just what kind of "artist" are you? I am talking about "real musicians" here (you know, those people that actually play instruments and sing well rather than sampling everything from another piece of music or a computer?) because I always thought the idea was that when you made a studio recording, you went into the studio, practised a lot, had several goes at the recording, then sat there and mixed it until you got the final definitive version on the CD? Beyond that, you want lots of air play of that definitive version and sell a lot of CDs of it. Sure, people may cover your songs in the future but I doubt any artist would prefer to hear some hacked about piece of crap played rather than the definitive version they originally recorded.

      just because you don't know where to look for good remixes or music doesn't mean you should piss on countless hard working souls.

      You're right - I don't know where to look for good remixes because the music I listen to doesn't NEED to be remixed. If yours does, then fine, go do it, but I doubt very much there's any of it in my personal music collection.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    5. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much music does not need to be remixed. People want to hear different takes and that group of people includes the artist themselves.

      Don't try and use grammaer nazi stuff to deviate from the point.

      If you want to call my abilities as amusician into question, I play the guitar, bass, synthesizer, keyboard, piano. I write, produce, remix, engineer and work in close collaboration with one of the biggest music production software companies in the world. Not multi platinum, but I think I'm entitled to speak on behalf of a VERY large community who support my position.

      I'll try and make it a bit easier for you to understand.

      Do you think hundreds of smelly kids high on drugs who just wanna jump up and down and just have some silly fun will be able to listen to the original version of The Wall in a night club?

      At the studio I will listen to the original version happily and enjoy it even more, but at 3am on a Friday night the only place I excpect to listen to that mix of the track is in the poker machine room of some seedy redneck bar.

      Your view of the recording process is skewed. You confuse a song and production. You don't really know your sampling from your remixing and are keeping a closed mind about things.

      I'm not trying to bash you.. but it's hard to not communicate with someone like yourself without frustration. My stand is that there is an amazing world of music that can take you to amazing places where a drumloop recorded by some band in the 70's has turned into a whole genre.

      -Sj53

    6. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      People want to hear different takes and that group of people includes the artist themselves.

      Yes, sure the artist is going to listen to different takes before choosing the one(s) for an album and, yes, if you're a big enough fan of a musician, you may enjoy hearing other takes that musician made. None of that goes against what I've said so far.

      Don't try and use grammaer nazi stuff to deviate from the point.

      Well then don't try to convince me you're an "artist" when you can't be bothered to write English properly.

      If you want to call my abilities as amusician into question, I play the guitar, bass, synthesizer, keyboard, piano. I write, produce, remix, engineer and work in close collaboration with one of the biggest music production software companies in the world.

      So, just like me, you want to earn a living and to continue to do so. Fine, but by your own admission, you work in a music software company which, whatever that software actually does, can only serve to make music more sterile. So you're just protecting your job here.

      Do you think hundreds of smelly kids high on drugs who just wanna jump up and down and just have some silly fun will be able to listen to the original version of The Wall in a night club?

      Of course not. But then do you think sitting alone in a comfortable chair focusing and listening to a piece of music is the same kind of activity as those kids in a club? Again, no. In the first case, it's about doing nothing more than giving the music your complete attention (whether it's rock, jazz, classical, whatever) but in the latter case, what the "music" actually is is pretty much irrelevant - it just has to be loud and have enough beats per minute to be danceable to.

      I excpect to listen to that mix of the track is in the poker machine room of some seedy redneck bar.

      Live bands aside, you wouldn't go into a bar just to listen to music! You go to meet someone for a beer, and if they happened to have a good jukebox you'd throw on a song or two - fine, but music is not the prime activity there, is it?

      You don't really know your sampling from your remixing and are keeping a closed mind about things.

      Remixing is done purely because DJs want to feel "unique" or "special" in front of their audience - put on anything that's got enough beats per minute and the kids will dance to it. Great, good luck to them, it's not my scene but if they enjoy it, what the hell.

      But let's not classify remixing as anything to do with music - it's a mechanical process purely to fill a market.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    7. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by tbonius · · Score: 1

      I assume you didnt listen to any of these remixes. If you have listened to them and you are still convinced that remixing only serves the purpose of a DJ in a club then you have a pretty contricted view of music and probably have never worked in a prefessional recording environment.

      Remixing serves many other purposes for conceptual visions as well as the artisitic expression and potential of what any particular musical piece might contain. It allows an artist to explore possibilities that might not have been conceived during initial creation. If you are a musician who has worked in a professional recording environment then you know that even working with a producer can render results far removed from the original concept of how the original material was written. This can also lead to creative ideas on how to expand upon a theme or even create a totally different piece. As a musician I would hope that you would understand this.. because inevitably one is influenced by the music to which one is exposed. This exposure helps in shaping artistic expression. Everything one creates is a direct result from the influence of other material. Period.

      Focusing on a strictly electronically-centric style of music, I find it shameful to hear anyone that proclaims themselves a musician to cast any sort of shadow over this particular genre of music. Remixing and turntablism ARE a modern form of music. Period. I am sorry if you do not want to accept that as a fact. I am also sorry for the parents and grandparents of the 1940s and 1950s that did not consider Rock a form of music, or the generation of the early 20th century that did not consider Jazz a form of music.

      This form of creativity has expanded so far into American culture that Berklee School of Music even teaches courses on it. I assume you consider Berklee a reputable school.

      A modern musician pushes the boundaries of creativity into other areas where others might not ever dwell, instead of confining ones self to any particular constriction or limitation. This is what what seperates musicians from players.

      --
      ** Share what you know, learn what you do not **
    8. Re:Ummm okay your a little off base by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      Because everyone gets it perfect the first time. I mean, why make the piano, didn't the harpsichord get it right THE FIRST TIME?

      Didn't the get the magna carta get it right THE FIRST TIME? Isn't the consitiution just a sucking remix of it?

      Shouldn't you just tell me to get off your lawn already? I wonder if Chaucer would really give two.. 'F'its about it anyway.

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
  54. Better business sense than you might think by petrus4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know it's been said before, but Gabriel and other artists who opt to do this are smarter than it might initially look.

    As in the terminology of the open source software market, in this context Gabriel's music constitutes what they call a "loss leader."

    He puts his entire discography online, free for the taking. He doesn't make a cracker from that, and presumably he wouldn't plan to. He also lets people do the mashy thing as Bowie did. This generates enormous positive PR for him that he supposedly "gets the open source revolution." Then after a while, he either decides he's got bored sitting at home, or he wants to make some additional revenue...so he decides he wants to do a comeback series of concerts. He'd use his site with the free music as a point of sale for the concert tickets. Let's also say hypothetically that in the meanwhile, a particular one of the mashies of his music has become unusually popular. So he arranges for the author of this particular mashy to play at the concerts with him as a supporting act...Mashy Kid either does his thing solo, or better yet, he and Gabriel do a duet of sorts. Gabriel could also do something like a "very limited" run of autographed photos or CDs to sell at the concerts...which given the infinitely replicable nature of the music files, would hold particular appeal as unique objects.

    Mashy Kid gets professionally discovered, so he's very happy...Gabriel's positive public image would be through the roof by this point...and he could also more or less surf home after the concerts on the tidal wave of cash that would have been forthcoming. (Assuming he still has a large fanbase of course, which I'm assuming he does...not to mention the additional demand that would have been raised by the chance of seeing Mashy Kid play)

    This of course is only one of an infinite number of possible scenarios by which he could make a fortune with this.

    So...yep, it's a crazy move, all right. Crazy like a fox. ;-)

    1. Re:Better business sense than you might think by The-Bus · · Score: 1

      Another scenario:

      Masky Kid (love that name) gets a record deal via Peter Gabriel. Let's say the record deal is via Real World Studios. Some of the music is released via MSN Music UK (which uses OD2, Gabriel's online music technology). Some of it is licensed to games via Ubisoft (which Gabriel has done before). And let's say it's all mixed on Solid State Logic mixers and a dozen are given away to the best mixers on a specialized site (or on MySpace, etc). Oh, Gabriel owns Solid State Logic.

      Add to that the fact that just because the music is online for free doesn't mean he can't have the CDs in retail locations. After all, not everyone has a computer + internet connection + CD burner or MP3 player.

      Smart artists who have good business advisors have been handling all this correctly.

      --

      Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  55. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

    Anime is for people who like lots of cartoons of Cthuloid tentacles raping schoolgirls. That's it.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  56. Holy crap, this rules. by necro2607 · · Score: 1

    Holy crap. All I have to say is: fuck yes.

  57. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

    Your sig and your post synergize so well :)

    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  58. IAASE by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Your premise was faulty. The MP3 process does NOT have a step that separates out the individual "tracks" of a song.

    And also, you may be surprised that not all songs are created by recording one instrument at a time each on it's own track and then mixed together by the Neptunes. There are occasionally musicians who are in the same room and actually PLAY TOGETHER and are recorded on the same mic (or pair of mics more properly).

    Ask the nice Mr. Albini if you don't believe me.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  59. Nine Inch Nails by Terragen · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I'm pretty sure Trent Reznor did something similar to this a long time ago.

  60. It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by pandrijeczko · · Score: 3, Insightful
    At the grand old age of 44, I believe that I have finally discovered what is missing from the lives of the 16-25 year old crowd...

    ...they don't have "a nice cup of tea" anywhere near as frequently as they should.

    For example:

    1. Interactivity - Why does those youngsters need a plethora of widesceen/surround sound/commentary/frappuchino options on every bloody DVD that comes out? By the time you've worked out what bleeding settings you want, you've changed your mind about what you wanted to watch in the first place! BUT, make a nice hot strong cup of tea first, sit down in your favourite chair, take a sip of your tea and it *DOESN'T MATTER* what sound/screen/moccachino options are set, you WILL just relax and enjoy your movie whatever way the screen or sound is!

    2. Remixing - What's this constant need to "fiddle about" with music with that lot? Why have they got to take "this bit from that track, that bit from this track" and then, *WHEN THEY'VE FINISHED* fiddling with it, they get some big black American bloke to do so much talking over it that you can't hear it anyway! BUT, if they just had a sip of a nice strong hot cup of tea first, they'd put all the CDs they want to listen to in a little pile next to their comfy chair and just *PLAY EACH ONE IN ORDER* while listening intently in a relaxed mood.

    3. Coffee - What's all this business about "iced mocha laccamaccachino with marshmallows and little umbrella in the top" in, for example, Starbucks? You get a coffee because you are thirsty, you stand in a queue for 30 minutes and when you finally get to the end of the queue, you order something that takes a further two days to manufacture from start to finish... and then you wonder why you're miserable??? How simple is a nice hot cup of tea to make - teabag, hot water and milk and sugar if you want it, what's the big deal? And you can put it in a thermos flask and carry it about with you so you can have a nice, hot cup of tea whenever you want one.

    4. Fashion - What's all this business about wearing jeans where the gusset is dangling down round by your knees? If we'd have worn those in my day, friends would have laughed at you for looking like you'd dropped a "brown trout" or two in the back of your Levi's! And how do you run??? Is this planet eventually going to be entirely inhabited by people in "sensible, cheap, elasticated waist jeans" because all the fashionable ones weren't able to run away quick enough from falling buildings, crashing airliners and raging infernos? BUT, before making those clothing choices, have a nice, hot, strong cup of tea and the caffeine entering your system combined with the warmth from the hot liquid, and "terminal clothing" will be a thing of the past!

    Tea, nice and hot... that's the answer.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    1. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      You make tea with a tea-bag? You Phillistine!

    2. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kung-Fu is a Chinese word.

      [consumes own hat with ketchup on top]

    3. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Funny

      I get that "tea" is your code for marijuana, but what are "milk" and "sugar" supposed to be?

    4. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And as anyone who has read The Manual will tell you, tea is also an integral part in having a number one hit.

    5. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by sammy+baby · · Score: 1

      The sugar would be angel dust. Milk, though... dunno. Malt liquor?

    6. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by filthWisard · · Score: 2

      As a 19 year old perpetual tea drinker I could not agree more. I constantly see my peers running around like headless chickens doing pointless things and not being relaxed, and so have taken it upon myself to provide as much tea to everyone as I can. From this I have learned that it is not old age that brings wisdom, but the mighty drink of tea. If all Americans drank tea think how much better evrything would be. Also, listening to Peter Gabriel, especially the Genesis stuff is infinatly more plesurable when drinking tea.

    7. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Remember, "a nice cup of tea" should always link to: http://www.nicecupofteaandasitdown.com/

    8. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

      >And you can put it in a thermos flask and carry it about
      >with you so you can have a nice, hot cup of tea whenever
      >you want one.

      And if you prefer coffee, just dump the coffee, cream and sugar all into the thermos, and give it a quick shake.

      Then pour yourself a perfect cup anytime you like. Relaxing bliss ... and the thermos cup is just the right (small teacup) size, yet still looks manly ;)

    9. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

      Douglas Adams, is that you?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
    10. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by muellerr1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I started to read your post but then it was too long and I couldn't figure out what to do with all that plain text (not one single flash file in your whole damn post!) so I ran off to Starbucks to get a nice Grande No water Extra Chai Chai (because chai is like tea, right?) but on my way I tripped in my baggy pants (looked pretty damn good while doing it, too) and by the time I got back there was a new lead story on /. so I read that instead. So what was your point again? And be sure to sum it up in four words or less. I remember it had something to do with Starbucks.

    11. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by ameline · · Score: 1

      How about a nice cup of advanced tea substitute? (A substance almost, but not quite, entirely unlike tea.)

      --
      Ian Ameline
    12. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by talonyx · · Score: 1

      I fully concur with your post. In fact, it's 7 AM right now and I have somewhere to be, but I am brewing a nice teapotfull of Earl Grey and I am going to sit here and drink the whole damned thing before I even think of rushing off to work.

      I'm also pegged directly by your 16-25 crowd there. Perhaps there's hope yet?

    13. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by devilsbrigade · · Score: 1

      1. Interactivity is important to some people. Not everyone is content to just sit back and watch. They want to be able to control the sound, aspect ratio, color, warmth of the video. No everyone in the world was born into a constitutional monarchy, mate. some of us like our choices even if they just complicate things. 2. Remixing is one of the greatest arts in music. Not everyone is talented or creative enough to make new music. But occassionally, you get a combination of two artists in a remix that turns our a result that is better than the originals. I refer you to Q UNIT . Also, not every remix has a large black bloke talking. Some of them are rather short in hieght. 3. I don't drink coffee or tea. I do suggest a nice Vitaminwater thought. 4. I don't know what the Chav's in your country do, but most of us wear pants that fit us.

    14. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by RESPAWN · · Score: 1

      I think Milk means Meth. If I'm not mistaken, when Meth is dissolved in water, it takes on the form of kind of a whitish liquid.

      --

      If Murphy's Law can go wrong, it will.

    15. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      This post is why slashdot needs a "-1 rambling old guy" mod.

      Kids are the same as ever. You just got older. Besides, its not "kids" that dont drink enough tea, its non british people.
      Put some liquor in that there tea, throw on some '2 many djs' and then we'll talk.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    16. Re:It's all about "a nice cup of tea" by Philotic · · Score: 1

      At the grand old age of 88, I believe that I have finally discovered what is missing from the lives of the 44-53 year old crowd... For Example: 1. Why do those youngsters need a plethora of color/stereo sound/milk and sugar options on every bloody 8mm reel that comes out? 2. What is this need to constantly re-record the same songs over and over? What usually ends up happening is some singer/songwriter loses steam and uses a song written by a peer as to avoid any work in writing his own material. 3. I agree here. 4. Extreme saggy pants have been out for quite some time now.

  61. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by orcrist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hmmmmm... I'm not sure if 'Troll' is the appropriate moderation, but I guess the moderator was trying to find something fairly close to "-1 Asshole".

    -chris

    --
    San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
  62. Re:suck 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's alright, I already have enough blank CDs, thank you.

  63. Re:suck 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So then, if I were Peter Gabriel, this would be a troll? Language rocks; you should put some thought into it.

  64. Jim's Big Ego by Kamineko · · Score: 1

    Did you know that Jim's Big Ego did that ages ago with their song Mix Tape?

  65. Re:Hip Hop != Rap (I am a programmer, listen to me by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Yep, my eldest kid had those really big pants for a while, in my day we dressed with style, ball crushers and platform shoes all round!

    Interesting link, "double dutching" was something young girls played with two skipping ropes in the 60's, they would recite "songs" to the beat of the jumping. I suppose it was an early kind of areobics class or rap dancing.

    Music is a powerfull force, it can speak to or across generations, my sig says it all (Re: Bob Marley for footnotes).

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  66. WHAT! by spongebill · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Peter Gabriel ....just a stupid blogger? excuse yourself...... Peter Gabriel was the BEST pop artist ever! And this is coming from someone who DESPISES popular music. lemme guess you probably think Phil Collins was the star of Genesis, too! what a loser you are! Gabriel made Genesis popular for Progressive/Rock/Classical all in one. Then the record company started pressuring them on time.... so Lamb Lies down on broadway suffered. then P. Gabriel and S. Hackket left and PHIL COLLINS RUINED THE GREATEST BAND EVER!

  67. IAARSE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a real sound engineer.
    When Albini records a band playing together in a room, he'll put spot mics on everything and DI bass or whatever else he can.
    The only tracks with significant spill will be drum overheads and a couple of ambient mics that he likes to stick around the place.
    So around 20 tracks of spot mics and four or so that might be picking up the other players.
    Everyone will also be baffled off as it's a nightmare to get a good drum sound if there is loads of spill.
    Even the beatles recorded like this.

    As far as MP3s go, yes compression will be much better on single tracks of a multitrack as described above compared to compressing the mixdown.
    There will of course be twenty times as many tracks, so it will be a lot more data, but the individual tracks will compress better.

  68. Remixomatosis, or been there done that by llauren · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Marillion did the same thing to a whole album (Anoraknophobia) as a competition a few years back and released the best remixes as the CD Remixomatosis (and the nearly-best-remixes as a "free" fan club CD). Winners also got cash prices, and many of the remixes sound really, really excellent.

  69. This actually is not that new... by zeruch · · Score: 1

    ...as Marillion had a successful project like this a few years ago which given the scope was much more ambitious: http://www.marillion.com/remix/index.htm

    And there is always Plunderphonics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plunderphonics which does not exactly apply here, but does bear some mention in terms of principle motivations.

  70. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by Paisley+Phrog · · Score: 1

    Speaking of his best work and African musicians, Youssou N'Dour provides vocals on In Your Eyes...so you prove half of your point, at least :) (Yes, it's one of my favorite PG songs).

  71. It's been done already by acroyear · · Score: 1

    Marillion allowed people to download (for a small fee, 'cause it was an expensive proposition) the separate tracks (and alternates), including unprocessed vocals, for their Anaraknophobia album back in 2000, and took the best remixes from the fans and released them as Remixomatosis a couple of years later.

    --
    "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
    -- Joe
  72. Re:My World:By A beautiful Mind-a novel in six boo by richie2000 · · Score: 1
    The only thing you've produced is a long post that no one would pay to read.

    So, what have YOU produced?

    I'd pay to read that post. And BTW, I earn good money every month giving away photos that I have "produced".

    Not some unknown with a hidden agenda.

    Quoth the AC.

    --
    Money for nothing, pix for free
  73. This is broadly correct... by squidsuk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Parent is broadly correct, the only comment I'd make is on the budget for movies, where I wonder about whether it's possible for cinema showings/movie theaters to act as "live performance" as it were for films they show, i.e. for theaters to organise themselves in advance and under contract/by subscription to fund new movies, paid for at the box office. In other words, in a post-copyright world, to serve the same sort of function for movies that live performance concerts and touring would provide for musicians.

    Comments that this model is like Socialism or Communism are wrong; there is a similarity, but the difference is that we are not talking about tangible property in limited supply. We are talking about intangibles which cost nothing to replicate or distribute, and which are therefore in infinite supply, which is why this model can work. This wasn't previously the case, content was always tied to physical expression in tangible/scarce media in the past, which is why 18th/19th century copyright made a kind of sense it doesn't any more.

    Think about this; if physical goods was instantly replicable, Star-Trek style, at zero cost, then you might find not only that our ideas about property would be forced to change, but also that Socialist/Communist ideals might suddenly work in that context, whereas in a real world of scarce goods they do not. For digital content, however, there is no scarcity, and copyright is a wholly artificial scarcity imposed on that which makes our society poorer than it need be, as well as supporting a wholly artificial "industry" that does not in fact add value or generate wealth at all, however much money it handles.

  74. Re:My World:By A beautiful Mind-a novel in six boo by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

    One more time for all the programmers. Copyright as applied to software is a smidgeon of what copyright is used for. So, screw all the novellists?

  75. MOD PARENT UP!!! by dunc78 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Though a little harsh on the other posters, the parent is correct. Also, just to finish the process discussed in parent, the real compression comes when the psychoacoustic model tells the quantizer where to distribute available bits, with the number of available bits being driven by the desired bit rate. Basically you look at the signal to mask ratio in each subband, and distribute the most bits to the subbands that have the highest SMR.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Basically you look at the signal to mask ratio in each subband, and distribute the most bits to the subbands that have the highest SMR."

      Much better.
      If I could condense my thoughts into one line as concisely as this, I would not have to swear so fucking much.

  76. some musicians like file trading too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Other bands have done similar things for a long time. The earliest example I remember is Pitchshifter (pitchshifter.com) putting their samples on CDs and making use of remixes they're sent. They even made their own label so that they could put a free mix CD with their live album, which their previous label wouldn't allow. As someone else has said, true hip-hop has done similar for ages, where it has been tolerated. Some other bands have gone the whole hog by allowing sharing of live bootlegs, or tolerating sharing of new content (some still feeling free to comment on lack of sales at gigs I have been to). One rather big rock/indie group I have worked for even distributed soundboard recordings of their live shows through p2p and forums under pseudonyms made up at a rehearsal. We were a bit wasted, and later watch a pirate copy of Scream 3 months before it released where we were.

    What NIN, Peter Gabriel, and others have done by allowing users to mix their stuff is nothing new but does allow for people to see use of the technology for promotion - although how this relates to sales and actually making any stand against RIAA tactics and to try to work with the filesharing public is beyond me, and is probably short lived.

  77. Re:My World:By A beautiful Mind-a novel in six boo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'd pay to read that post."

    I don't see an astrix by your name. So no you didn't.

    "And BTW, I earn good money every month giving away photos that I have "produced"."

    All under the copyright system that the OP wants to get rid of. Let me know how it turns out after he gets his way.

    "Quoth the AC."

    I know you're not THAT dumb.

  78. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    "Don't dump your crap into the marketplace and expect the best talent to do your bidding for free."

    Because a song that charts at #29 is "crap?" I mean, it ain't like he's releasing some no-name b-side that nobody's heard of.

  79. Also Sigue Sigue Sputnik by Cybrex · · Score: 1

    I was going to mention the Shamen CD (which I'm fortunate enough to have a copy of), but you beat me to it. :-)

    Sigue Sigue Sputnik has encouraged fan remixes of their music for as long as I've been aware of the band. I'm not aware of them releasing a CD with specific tracks and samples, but they've made a lot of them available online. I don't have the URL, but there is/was a web site for them (unofficial, I suspect) that had a flash app that allowed you to mix tracks right on the web page. Nifty stuff.

    --
    Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic Optimism, Intelligent Technology, Spontaneous Order- BEST DO IT SO!
    1. Re:Also Sigue Sigue Sputnik by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sigue Sigue Sputnik has encouraged fan remixes of their music for as long as I've been aware of the band.

      Sigue Sigue Sputnik made MUSIC? Wow, I'll have to add it to my collection of SSS recordings. <grin>

  80. 148.6 BPM?!?! by ZeusAndHades · · Score: 2, Funny

    Am I the only one who thinks that this is a completely unreasonable BPM to work with? 148.5 I could understand. Ah well... perhaps I can hack up a remix in spite of that.

    --
    -=Zeus=And=Hades=-
  81. Sapphire Hibernation The Kennedy Meriwether Coll. by PR+Wire · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The Kennedy Meriwether Collective release a new album, "Sapphire Hibernation" Free song download at www.SirBillkay.com More info: http://thekmc.com/PRPage.aspx

  82. Quite handy for the educators by Azari · · Score: 1
    This is very cool.

    I love giving these sorts of things to my digital media classes to play with when they're learning about digital audio.

  83. This time Peter Gabriel has gone too far by capitalj · · Score: 2, Funny

    I told you!!!!!

    1. Re:This time Peter Gabriel has gone too far by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut your mouth.
      Just drive the car.

  84. Spank the monkey? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I first read that as Peter Gabriel Wants You to Re-Spank the Monkey.. heh... great game.. great game.. especially if you know the cheat for it ;)

  85. Peter Gabriel's version sucks anyway by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

    The cover by Ozzie and Coal Chamber was vastly superior.

    --
    Why not fork?
  86. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by MustardMan · · Score: 1

    Because a song that charts at #29 is "crap?" I mean, it ain't like he's releasing some no-name b-side that nobody's heard of.

    Yeah, because no crappy song EVER gets near the top of the charts, right. It's not like there's completely awful song by a completely talentless hack at the number one spot right now, or anything....

    Oh, wait:
    http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/charts/chart_displa y.jsp?g=Singles&f=Pop+100

  87. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by AdamThor · · Score: 1

    release "In Your Eyes" and then... Don't dump your crap into the marketplace

    I would suggest that "In Your Eyes" is not one of Gabriel's stronger songs, unless maybe you're an angsty teenage girl.

    --
    -- "Oh. This guy again."
  88. Also done by Public Enemy, went a bit farther... by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... and actually used the track on the disc.

    For Revolverlution Public Enemy not only had a remix contest, but it was before the album was even released. They had a couple tracks on their website, including the title track Revolverlution. The winner of the remix contest was put on the album. The cool thing, it's really a different track, the guy has a totally different flow than Chuck D., and definitly falls into the "using current song to create a new song" rather than just simple copying (like the labels tend to say about remixes).

  89. He's probably got ADD... by ThurlMakes7 · · Score: 1
    Only people who don't understand creativity have a downer on copyright.

    Or else like David Byrne, David Bowie, or Lawrence Lessig - they're already millionaires and don't need it anyway.

  90. open source concepts in music business by stsp · · Score: 1

    Releasing individual tracks of a song is similar to releasing the source code of a program (from a musician's point of view). I wish more people would do that. I'd love to buy a DVD containing all the studio tracks of recordings of Bjoerk songs, for example, and remove the "singing", keeping the songs as instrumentals. But I don't have the freedom to do this, so I my only option is to not listen to it at all because I can't stand Bjoerk stuff the way it's been released :(

  91. Parent is spam by Cerberus7 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Somebody please mod the parent spam to hell.

    --
    I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
    1. Re:Parent is spam by Cerberus7 · · Score: 1

      Ah, so the preferred method of punishing one for pointing out spam is to mod them troll. Nice. Thankyou, mods-on-crack.com!

      --
      I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
  92. EVE cd-rom by mccoyspace · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Peter Gabriel is a real pioneer in thinking about how music, technology and communities come together. And this action is just the latest step in a long road. He realized early on the power that labels had over his music, so in the '80s and early 90's he bought back the rights to his catalog from the labels that had originally published it. (It is standard practice in contracts for the musician to sign over copyright to their songs to the label). Once those rights were secured he began to explore new ways of using his music. Two very early efforts were the Xplora and EVE cd-roms (see the site here .
    In the summer of 1994 I was hired by the Starwave Corporation in Seattle to be part of a small team developing EVE. The idea was pretty interesting -- pair the work of different contemporary visual artists up with songs from Gabriel, treating each as raw material, then create a framework in which people can explore, share and remix that material to create an integrated audio/video hybrid that is greater than the sum of its parts. I had just finished a graduate art program that had similar ideas, so I felt right at home.
    We used the work of artists Helen Chadwick , Yayoi Kusama , Cathy de Monchaux , and Nils-Udo -- using high rez scans of their work as starting points. They were paired up with Gabriel's songs 'Come Talk To Me' , 'Shaking The Tree' , and 'In Your Eyes'. We had the equivalent of the sample packs that he has made available on-line for Shock the Monkey. These were professionally produced loops from the multi-track masters. Gabriel's recording process usually involves dozens and dozens of tracks, so these samples weren't mix-downs, but elements from a single track.
    We created something called the Interactive Musical Xperience to bring these elements together. It was a kind of audio/video sampler that you could play with your keyboard, triggering sound and animation loops against a rendered landscape background. The software quantized everything so you would always be in time and you could work improvisationally or with a simple graphical timeline. The team developing it had a diverse background in software development, fine art and filmmaking. My job eventually became to create functional mockups of the interaction using Director 4....! The production team eventually relocated to the Real World studios in Box, UK which was an incredibly intense creative environment -- musicians, engineers, filmmakers, photographers, designers all working together in a bucolic 'campus' made from an old mill complex.
    Although I eventually left Real World and Starwave to pursue my own artwork, it was a really great experience. The fact that the rest of the world has started to catch up to the ideas Peter Gabriel has been thinking about since the early 90's only reaffirms how resonant those ideas continue to be.

  93. Moby Remix Contest, Downloads vs Paying by lullabud · · Score: 1

    Moby had a remix contest for "Everytime You Touch Me" where he included the samples on a track of a single.

    I think the difference in what NIN and Peter Gabriel are doing is that they're allowing free distribution through downloads as opposed to having to pay for the CD to participate. A minor difference.

  94. This goes way back by Megajim · · Score: 1

    Actually, in 1788 Mozart released the sheet music to many of his earlier compositions, so that any moderately competent musician could alter the music accordingly, thus "remixing" it. At the time, it was seen as a tawdry, money-generating gimmick, but now, 218 years later, Peter Gabriel has finally proven that Mozart was, in fact, a closet genius.

  95. Re:suck 2.0 by jamar0303 · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't say that her greatest hits would be musical ones...

    --
    OSx86 FTW
  96. Open-sourcing end-of-lifed abandonware by Animats · · Score: 1

    This is similar to what some companies have done with software that's reached its commercial end of life - they open-sourced it. This gets them out of the costs of stocking, distributing, and maintaining the product, while making them look good.

    Back when you had to renew copyrights, that routinely happened to movies and music; the Internet Archive has an archive of about a hundred feature films and serials whose copyright wasn't renewed. Since the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, we don't have that happening in the US any more. But distributors still do have some costs associated with keeping content in the catalog.

    So now we're seeing a new way for content owners to get some last publicity benefit out of music that's reached its end of life. We might see more of this from the rap/hip hop business, where careers tend to be short and few artists have long-term hits.

  97. Re:I was actually thinking about this a while back by aliensporebomb · · Score: 1

    Don't do it. I wondered what the fuss was about anime and now I've
    got gigabytes of the stuff. It's kind of addicted.

    Some of the stories have surprising depth and inventiveness.

    I'd say many of the american movie studios could learn a thing
    or two about depth of story and character development from the
    anime writers.

    Oh yeah, and there's tentacles if you want them but it's not true
    to say that every anime production has tentacles.

    Although, it would be rather amusing if some sweet innocent love
    story all of a sudden turned into a tentacle battle.

  98. Psstttt by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "I'd love to buy a DVD containing all the studio tracks of recordings of Bjoerk songs, for example, and remove the "singing", keeping the songs as instrumentals. "

    Karaoke

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  99. Re:suck 2.0 by kthejoker · · Score: 1

    The only reason this "give it away" model works is because he isn't giving anything at all away. You can't give away information, you can only share it.

    This same model wouldn't work with food, for example, because I can't give you an apple, let you eat it, and then let you decide if you want to pay for it or not. Everybody would simply say they didn't like the apple and wouldn't pay for it. And then I'd not only be out the money, but also the apple.

    Certainly some companies have some sunk costs in promotional copies (a coupon for 1 free apple), but otherwise they're on the "reputation" model - you buy it based on reptuation of the seller and the product.

    But yes, ultimately, anybody trying to peddle information out there is going to have to move to a "try it for free, pay me if you like it" model, because information is only valuable when its transferred, and limiting transferability will kill off the demand for information.

  100. Duncan Sheik just did this too on White Limousine by bshensky · · Score: 1

    ...though you had to purchase the album to get the DVD that contains the discrete tracks.

    See http://www.limoremix.com/ to listen to what others have remixed and posted.

    FWIW, White Limousine is IMO his best work since "Barely Breathing" and his second album as well.

    Duncan and Peter have it right...forget record sales...when you've got fan mindshare, the money will inevitably come.

    --
    Makin' money, makin' friends, makin' whoopee and wearin' Depends
  101. Old News - June 2006! by DrMindWarp · · Score: 1

    PG's 'Shock the Monkey' remix competition was started in June 2006. The competition is over now.

  102. Re:suck 2.0 by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    information is only valuable when its transferred, and limiting transferability will kill off the demand for information.

    No. Information is quite often more valuable to the holder if it is not transferred. For instance, if I figure out how to attract, and subsequently completely satisfy any woman, every time, to such a degree that she'll think of me first, last and always, I'm better off if I don't explain said technique(s) to you. And by the way, I'm not going to, either. :)

    The problem with sweeping generalizations is that they're often trying to sweep where they really ought to be shoveling...

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  103. Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by Garwulf · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am not a lawyer, but I am a published author and a professional writer. And, while there's a lot wrong in the post one branch above this one, getting into a pissing match over it isn't going to help, particularly when most of this tends to be over a misunderstanding about what copyright is and why it is there.

    So, instead of arguing, I'm going to educate - this is copyright 101. So please pay close attention, and you'll understand what is going on a lot better. I'm going to start by describing what copyright is and what it does, and then talk about why we still need it (and, I'd argue, need it even more than before).

    Copyright today in most western countries is based on an international agreement called the Berne Convention, first signed at the end of the 19th century, and most recently updated in the 1970s. There is a history of copyright that goes far beyond the Berne Convention, such as the Stationer's Log in 17th century England and a clause in the original U.S. Constitution, but we're dealing with copyright as it is today, not its history (which, while relevant, is for another discussion). For the sake of this discussion, we'll call the copyrighted material "art" (it takes less time to type than "copyrighted material").

    Copyright covers two basic functions - the first is the right to distribute (hence "copy-right"), and the second is derivative works. Both of these tend to be misunderstood a great deal by laymen.

    The right to distribute basically means that the creator of the art is able to decide how that art is to be distributed within reasonable means. If the creator wishes the art to be released to the public for free download, the creator is allowed to do that. If the creator wants to sell the publication rights to a publisher, the creator can do that too. It's important to note that there is no explicit instruction in copyright law of how a creator is to distribute his/her art - what this amounts to in the end is that the wishes of the creator must be respected under law.

    There are limits to these wishes, however. For example, while the creator owns the copyrights to the content itself, s/he does not own what the content is distributed on. So, if I write a book about an alien invasion where the aliens are using biological weapons, sell the publication rights to a publisher, and you buy the printed book, I cannot tell you that you can only read it in the wee hours of the morning, or anything like that. I also cannot tell you that you can't give that book you just bought away as a present, or sell it to a used bookstore, as you own the paper it is printed on, and can do what you like with it in that regard. I CAN tell you that you cannot copy it and sell it on the street corner, or give copies of it away, as that would undermine my wishes as to how it is to be distributed. If you disregard my wishes in terms of distribution, copyright law allows me to take action to protect my intellectual property and ensure that my wishes are respected.

    (An example of copyright in action is the open source license, which recently stood up in court. That license has its binding power because copyright law supports it.)

    These wishes are also mitigated by fair use. Fair use means that if you are writing an academic paper and you want to quote the aforementioned book about the alien invastion, you may do so without asking permission, so long as you give credit where it is due. There are other clauses and limitations, but those vary internationally, and most people here actually do have a good sense of what fair use is - it's copyright that seems to cause people all the trouble.

    Depending on what country you are in, copyright extends anywhere from 50-75 years after the death of the creator. This is a source of much debate. On the creator's side, it allows the creator to leave a legacy for his/her family based on his/her hard work. When it comes to what it means on the side of the publishers or public, it's a bit more complicated. A lot depends on what ri

    --
    Robert B. Marks
    Author, Demonsbane in Diablo Archive
    1. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by stinerman · · Score: 1
      So, if I write a book about an alien invasion where the aliens are using biological weapons, sell the publication rights to a publisher, and you buy the printed book, I cannot tell you that you can only read it in the wee hours of the morning, or anything like that. I also cannot tell you that you can't give that book you just bought away as a present, or sell it to a used bookstore, as you own the paper it is printed on, and can do what you like with it in that regard.
      Unless your art is software. Then, for some crazy reason, you can attach a license to it and then do this. Book licenses are unenforceable by the doctrine of first sale, but, yet, software licenses (EULAs) get different treatment. Hmm...
    2. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by Garwulf · · Score: 1

      I haven't heard of that standing up in court, though. From what I understand, most EULAs aren't enforceable in the first place. I think there was one case involving a university student selling a copy of MS Office on eBay, and the court sided with the student (can't for the life of me remember the name, though).

      --
      Robert B. Marks
      Author, Demonsbane in Diablo Archive
    3. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1
      Sheesh. Given that you reply to my post and claim it has wrong information in it, you post an uninformed and unintelligent reply posing from a lecture's standpoint. You admit you don't have the knowledge to lecture about it and do it anyway - talk about arrogance.

      Just a few points I'm having trouble with from your post:

      or the sake of this discussion, we'll call the copyrighted material "art" (it takes less time to type than "copyrighted material").

      Yes, we can call copyrighted material art, but calling it abc would have been less misleading. What most people would consider art is not or only partly under copyright. The much much bigger issue here is content, which would be a stretch to call "art". I don't necessarily call source code or technical documentation or a fiction novel art.

      Copyright covers two basic functions - the first is the right to distribute (hence "copy-right"), and the second is derivative works.

      Also misleading. Copyright covers one basic thing: distribution. It basically says that you can only publish the copyrighted work or a derivative work given that you bear the copyright owner's permission for the original work. There is no inherent "second" here, the derivative part in copyright law isn't a separate right or means of control, its just included in the definition of the copyright's scope.

      and you buy the printed book, I cannot tell you that you can only read it in the wee hours of the morning, or anything like that.

      That is called unregulated use. To put it into perspective, there is the set of unregulated use. It has a subset, which is regulated - by copyright law, which also has a subset, called fair use.

      The fact of the matter is that copyright law as it stands today, even under the Berne Convention, just hasn't been around long enough for us to know what the long term effects are.

      What kind of dangerously addictive plant are you smoking? First, copyright law changed a lot (to the worse) in the centuries, especially in the last, but the changes in the last hundred years seem to consist of one thing: extending the time limit of copyright. It has a quite predictable and easily forseen effect: we lose culture. Yes, I actually have first hand information that a lot of the music from the 30-40-50s is lost, just because degradation of the recording material didn't magically stop just because law pushed the date of them falling into public domain out for another 20 or so years. That's just one example of the many. Think of all the derivative work we're missing out on! Heck! Mickey Mouse IS a derivative work!

      What copyright law does here is protect the creator from basically having his/her own work used to compete against him/her, or from having that creator's work bastardized

      That has never been the goal of copyright. NEVER. The stated goal of copyright is to increase innovation/culture. The way it currently tries to accomplish that is by handing out bonus stuff to the content creators, like control over distribution. It's up to the copyright owner's wish what he uses that control for. It can be used for those purposes as you cite.

      One of the key arguments of the zealots against copyright is that all art is information - and that just isn't true.

      I agree, that's not true. But that's not the point. Some art is copyrighted. But all copyrighted stuff is just information. It can't be anything else: it is not a physical object.

      1. Information tends to be collected, and art is created.

      You're using a different definition for information than I did. Information can be collected, but information is the copyrighted work itself. All copyrighted work is information, but not all information is copyrighted. Art is created, but the part under copyright is information. It is the sequence of sounds as information, not the soundwaves or bits that is

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    4. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are differing opinions on the validity of EULAs. According to wikipedia:

      The 7th Circuit and 8th Circuit subscribe to the "license" and "not sold" arguments, while most other circuits do not.

      We'll have to see a SCOTUS decision to reconcile these conflicting decisions.

    5. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by Garwulf · · Score: 1

      I'm not willing to get into a pissing match with you. I've been here too many times before. It doesn't matter what I say - it's like talking to a brick wall. I can make point after point, present evidence after evidence, and I'll be told that I'm ignorant, lying, and misled. In the meantime, I'll see arguments claiming that what was good in the 18th century is obviously what we need now (tell that to women and blacks), or that all the effort and time that goes into art creates nothing but information. I even had somebody claim that the Internet had killed mainstream distribution, and when I challenged him to prove it, he claimed that the very fact that we were discussing his claim made it true. And quite frankly, I have neither the time nor the inclination to dance this dance again.

      I wonder what your agenda actually is. Do you want reform, or are you actually just looking for some free music? If you want reform, than you have a lot of learning to do. Before you can reform a thing, you must first understand that thing. And, regardless of your protestations of how "uninformed" I am, I'm the one here who has published books, and who has put his blood sweat, and tears into his work, and has made a point of understanding the Berne Convention.

      So, if you want to actually understand this thing, I'd suggest starting with the Berne Convention. The Paris text can be found at http://www.law.cornell.edu/treaties/berne/overview .html

      I'd also suggest looking at the Stationer's Log, the system of artistic patronage and how it developed prior to the first signing of the Berne Convention, and the social history of the 19th century in the United States and England.

      And that is the last I am willing to say in this particular discussion thread.

      --
      Robert B. Marks
      Author, Demonsbane in Diablo Archive
    6. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      I'm not willing to get into a pissing match with you.

      Well I'm sorry that you're thinking like that. You're not getting into a pissing match with anyone as we're not in one. You have replied to my post from a high stand, while ignoring my reasoning in my original post altogether and trying to lecture me with information that is quite easy to refute if you've got some time to write up a reply, which I did. You might feel like talking to a brick wall because you're not talking about the issue. As in, you're ignoring what others are saying and making faulty assumptions as to what they are saying.

      I'll see arguments claiming that what was good in the 18th century is obviously what we need now (tell that to women and blacks)

      I just want to stress that I never made such argument and bringing an argument up from another discussion with someone else is not entirely classy as it would seem that you're trying to disprove my viewpoint by binding it to objectionable arguments I didn't make. So you're not trying to take part in a pissing match eh?

      or that all the effort and time that goes into art creates nothing but information.

      You're using loaded terms, that is why you're mistaking physical art with copyrighted information or "intellectual property". Information is the song/music, representation is the recording and art is a quality information that is a beautiful song or music.

      I wonder what your agenda actually is. Do you want reform, or are you actually just looking for some free music?

      I'm just thinking. I want a system that is in sync with a few basic facts of life, like you know physical reality. The physical reality is not likely to change and it forces us to consider copyright obsolete in the context of a networked sharing of information. I want an artist to get paid for creating art, not for distributing it. If there is zero cost for distribution, then distribution should be free, as thats what the free market says. I'll gladly pay a reasonable sum to an artist for creating art, but it would be mostly useless if noone can truly enjoy it - thats where distribution and derivative works come in. It is limited, _bad_ and not truly art if you're not allowed to experience it and build upon it.

      I'm the one here who has published books, and who has put his blood sweat, and tears into his work, and has made a point of understanding the Berne Convention.

      I hope you don't make the mistake of thinking that I think you shouldn't be compensated for your hard work if you so desire. I am saying that you shouldn't be given a monopoly on your creation. You have to understand that monopoly does nothing more but restrict the positive effect of the work you've created (it also gives the opportunity of the owners of the monopoly to exploit that situation and gain more cash - which is NOT just, respectful and healthy at all). The topic of copyright interests me, I find the topic interesting and I find the current system in need of change.

      Please note, I make my living from being paid to write code under the GPL license. This itself proves what I'm talking about in relation to getting paid for creating something and not profiting from a monopoly. I get paid to create something useful to someone and that someone doesn't have the power to restrict and monopolize the usefulness of the given code. The company can't say: let's not show this code to everyone so that everyone else who needs this kind of functionality has to do it themselves again. Yeah, that might be good for the short term interests of the company, but on medium and long term when everyone has to redo everything again, they lose - big time (this has to do with game theory, etc in general. It can be proven with solid maths. It boils down to the dilemma to cooperate or to take advantage of. If someone cooperates with others, they are doing ok. If someone takes advantage of people that are coop

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    7. Re:Okay, this is what copyright actually IS... by Garwulf · · Score: 1

      Okay - I will concede that I may have been a bit harsh with you. I had just come away from a discussion where somebody had been doing an impression of a brick wall, and I was seeing many of the same arguments, although looking back, you are actually trying to provide groundwork for them, rather than just repeating them and doing an ostrich impression anytime somebody disagrees with you.

      However, that doesn't mean that I see an understanding of what copyright is. I do not doubt that you understand the history of copyright, or the issues in the debate, but you're not giving any signs of understanding what copyright does RIGHT NOW (and I'm talking about the basic function of the law, not the issues surrounding it). That's what my initial post was about - trying to clear that up.

      So, I'm going to reply, and address your concerns. You can think what you want about them.

      1. The definition of information. Just in case I had been mistaken, I looked up the dictionary definition of the word in a dictionary I trust. So, "information" in the Oxford Dictionary of Current English is defined as: "n. 1 a something told; knowledge. b items of knowledge; news. 2 charge or complaint lodged with court, etc."

      Now, I am a professional writer, and I hold two B.A.s, one of which is in English Literature, and I would like to think that I have a comprehensive knowledge of at least the basic English words. In all of my reading, I have never seen the word used in the context that you use it except in one place - in the posts of people who are trying to advocate for the complete destruction of copyright, and most often by those who are abusing the debate to justify pirating music or movies. Your definition is wrong. The one sticky point is the first definition, "something told," but in the context of the second part of that definition, the best interpretation is a fact being told, not a created work.

      That being said, you are right - information should be free. Ideas should be free. But a created work draws on both, and is something different, and greater. Whether it should be free or not doesn't matter, because it is something that somebody created - what should matter is their wishes regarding it, within reason.

      Now, unfortunately, what you say about the GPL and your work under it can also be translated to saying "I'm a wage labourer." But, the GPL does bear examination. It is based on copyright law, and uses it to create a situation where sharing is mandated. It also respects the creator's rights - if a programmer wants to code something and have it be shared, the GPL ensures that there is a legal groundwork for that to happen, and not be abused. If a programmer wants to code something and have it be proprietary, so long as they don't use GPL'ed code, they are welcome to do so (at least that is my reading of it - I may be wrong on that detail). It's all perfectly legal, wonderfully utopian, and I hope that it lasts a very long time. Quite frankly, as a writer I don't have to worry about patent law doing silly things that will force me to do an impression of a pretzel just to write - but as a programmer, you've got to worry about that. At least the GPL provides some way of fighting that.

      Your vision of a world where everybody's needs are met is wonderful and utopian, and I wish we lived in a perfect world where something like that is possible. But, we don't. The big problem is that your vision raises a question - how will your vision of how intellectual rights should work be enforced? Any framework will be abused by people - it happens over and over again. Just look at the RIAA right now. I'm a creative artist, and they do NOT represent my views on copyright or how it should be enforced. They are abusing the law, and I am waiting with baited breath for somebody to file a class action suit against them and stop this madness (I'd do it myself, except that I live in Canada, and I don't have the resources to start it). Your vision will require some legal framework to protect the

      --
      Robert B. Marks
      Author, Demonsbane in Diablo Archive
  104. Re:suck 2.0 by stunt_penguin · · Score: 1

    I hope that's Greatest Hits as in the greatest instanced of someone hitting Paris Hilton with a blunt object repeatedly and at great length; I can't imagine any other kind of hit that would be associated with her.

    --
    When the posters fear their moderators, there is tyranny; when the moderators fears the posters, there is liberty.
  105. OK, here's a question by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    This is something to make you think. I am actually considering doing this. Some people might not think it was very funny.

    Around in the 80's there was a song released by Neil Diamond called "Heartlight". It was an ET-theme "turn on your heart light..." I recently moved into a new house where they assumed you would be replacing all of the overhead lights with ceiling fans, so they put in really ugly lights that were very, very cheap. These lights are very breast-shaped and everyone seeing them calls them "nipple lights" or "tit lights".

    So, how about if I make a nice music video of the lights being turned on and off with Neil Diamond's music in the background... except the word "heart" is replaced by a very different voice saying "tit"?

    Would this be fair use? Would Neil Diamond (or his agents, distribution company, etc.) be within reason for suing should I post this video on the Internet for all to download? Clearly, this oversteps the line of simply a parody - it is using his original material in a way that he did not intend in a way that devalues the original material.

    Just think about "Turn on your ... TIT ... light..." with a video of a ceiling light being turned on. Some people might think this was pretty funny. Might be pretty popular on YouTube.

    Because we can do this now, easily, should we be able to? What about a re-rub of the movie Mary Poppins with Mary's voice replaced by a trash-talkin' African American girl where about every fifth word was "muthr-fuckin"? Do you think Disney would find this flattering?

    How about taking a Boston Pops recording and adding some off-key "mistakes" just to make it more "accessible"? All in good fun, I assure you.

  106. Re:suck 2.0 by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Troll

    Slashdot: mods on crack. :)

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  107. Maybe, just maybe..."Change":dead at 83. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Untrue. DRM is something the companies want in order to force you to pay for the same thing multiple times and filesharing is just the excuse."

    Here's one for slashdot. Why the f**k did we bother these folks if all most were going to do was ignore what they said, and continue with the same old song and dance? I suggest any potential interviewees pay attention to the answer.

  108. Kidnappers? by Zenmonkeycat · · Score: 1
    Some in the music business would call this the commercial equivalent of hiring kidnappers to babysit.

    Based on the age of Peter Gabriel's music and the maturity of the people who would remix it, I'd call it the commercial equivalent of "Trusting your 35-year old child to babysit his own ass, even if he wants to have some friends over for beer."

    --

    *****
    Dear Mary,
    I yearn for you tragically,
    A.T. Tappman, Chaplain, U.S. Army.

  109. Okay, this is what common sense actually IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very good post.

    "There are other clauses and limitations, but those vary internationally, and most people here actually do have a good sense of what fair use is"

    I disagree.

    "(This is not to be confused with patent law, where you CAN patent an idea and prevent others from using it without permission, or trademark law, where you can do the same with a name.)"

    Within limits, but lets stay on topic.

    "So, why do we need copyright today? It comes down to respect."

    It also puts "art" creators on a more equal footing. The natural protections that most physical works enjoy, aren't present with intangiable works.

  110. Re:Put your publishing where your mouth is... by dthree · · Score: 1

    Oh, yeah. We really need to hear more versions of that. No thanks. I used to like that song before I heard it 10,000 times including remixes and covers.

    --
    "I forgot my mantra."
  111. Not new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not new for PG. In XPLORA1 (the Mac CD that came full of US goodies) he also gave samples and a mixer to remix a song from US (Was it "Blood of Eden"? I can't remember.. and I have an Intel Mac, so I can't run it...)

  112. Re:suck 2.0 by kthejoker · · Score: 1

    Uhh, "transferred" doesn't mean "sold"/"explained." In this case, you apply your information to please the woman. That's just another form of transference. And if she is the least bit aware of what's going on, she'll learn your techniques and sell them herself.

    You must make your information public - either the source or results must be made known to someone else - in order to profit from it (in this case sexually, but hey, that's better than money for the most part.) And by making it public, you expose it to the risk of being stolen.

    Trade secrets will inevitably become traded secrets.

  113. Re:suck 2.0 by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
    And if she is the least bit aware of what's going on, she'll learn your techniques and sell them herself.

    No. In all seriousness, eventually, you'll learn that being on the receiving end does not result in an inherent understanding of how, or even exactly where or in what sequence, stimulus is applied. For one thing, one's mind is, shall we say, otherwise occupied, very similarly to when an artist paints or a musician plays; different areas of the brain are engaged as opposed to those dominant when you're engaged in analytical tasks. Some areas of the body won't even supply detailed information on where and how they are being stimulated, for instance, the lower back and the perineum are both this way, and neither can be easily observed on one's self; yet both are highly erogenous zones on both males and females under certain circumstances, and both are common targets for advanced erotic practitioners.

    There are plenty of other examples, though. It is very common for a secondary result of information to be transferred, without the information itself. Formulas (trade secrets, typically) for everything from a soft drink to a drug; you get the product, and the end-user benefits, but you don't get the formula. The sophisticated presence of a nuclear submarine carries striking power born of (and borne by) enormous complexity without letting everyone know the exact details — depth attainable, type of warheads on board, etc. Satellites carry unknown capabilities, collect information and bring them to a very limited clientele, without letting those observed even know they're being observed, never mind how. If you cleverly bury a coffee can that contains several kilos of gold, and only you know where, the location — or in other words, the information that represents its location — is at its very highest value when only you know where the can is. Otherwise, the can is a lot more likely to be empty when you go back. Best you keep that entirely to yourself. Sharing would be wholly detrimental. A martial artist uses very technically specific information in delivering certain killing blows; but the recipient of the blow isn't going to be sharing that information any further. And so forth. It should be quite obvious that information does not need to be made public, or even go to an additional client, in order to be of value. I'm not saying that in some cases that isn't the case; just that it isn't always the case, because the original presumption was too broad.

    The "information must be distributed" model is just too simplistic. Information quite often has value without being exposed to second (or third) parties. Surely there are things you know that benefit you that I don't know; The reverse is also true. Some of the things I know I have not shared with anyone, yet they benefit me on a regular basis. Some of them are quite technical; one of the reasons I own a very successful software company and several other businesses is because I know a thing or two I don't tend to share. It isn't all about the end product; some of the key issues are tactical, structural and hierarchical, and they are anything but obvious (hence all the barely surviving software enterprises out there.)

    It isn't that "information wants to be free"; it is that people lacking it want it to be free, which is not the same thing at all. And for them, all I can say is... start digging. :)

    Now, if the line had been "Information must be applied for it to have value", I'd go for that. Though I'd also insist it has potential value prior to any such eventual application, even if it was never applied.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  114. Re:suck 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i will send you a copy of Paris Hilton's greatest hits

    I don't think you spelled that correctly.