bootleg/counterfeit
Ted O. Jackson
TOJACKSO at HAWK.SYR.EDU
Thu Feb 8 11:49:43 EST 1996
> What I refer to as "bootlegging", however, I'm not so sure about (and it
> would be interesting to hear Al and Deb's thoughts on this topic, since
> they are artists who may have been, or may be at some point in the
> future, "bootlegged"). Personally, I think bootlegs serve a useful
> function. Mostly, they provide fans (who probably have everything else
> the band has to offer already) material they don't otherwise have for
> their collection. True, profits from the sales of bootlegs don't go to
> the artist or record label, but I do not believe that that implies that
> bootlegs hurt the sales of legitamite releases -- unless people were to
> buy bootlegs instead of the legit releases (and I don't believe that this
> happens much, especially considering bootleg CDs usually cost $20 or more),
> I don't see how they hurt the sales. And, as I pointed out in my post
> regarding the lyrics, they may even actually *help* them (suppose I play
> my copy of *The Thing!* to a friend who's never heard BOC, and he thinks
> the music's is so cool that he goes out and buys *Workshop of the
> Telescopes*?). And, I think there have been cases where the existence of
> bootlegs have actually *helped* an artist or label. Look at the Beatles'
> *Anthology* - most of the tracks on there have been bootlegged for years
> when the band and the label were stating that "there's nothing left in
> the vaults worth releasing". Think any of the bootleggers are receiving
> royalty checks from Apple/EMI? ;-)
>
There is an issue of ownership and control of distribution of a work
of art [sorry for my redundance--I posted something like this
yesterday] Even if the release of bootlegs doesn't actually cost a
band financially, it removes a marketing tool from the hands of those
who own a product--to reduce music to its ugliest and most commercial
form. Also, Bootlegs/counterfeits aren't always of the highest
quality [I know, some bootlegs are better than the legit copies]. A
band could legitimately be concerned about the poor quality of
something being released as showing the band in an unfavorable light.
I'm not a recording artist, but I do play live music regularly. I
may not like it if someone circulated a tape of me where I totally
blow a guitar solo!
> Then again, perhaps if bootlegs were legal and readily available, then
> they might compete with legit releases. Perhaps the fact that they are
> obscure and in most cases illegal keeps things in the balance. Hmm...
>
You and I oare of the same mind, but are all fans as rabid as we are?
Also, a lot of bootlegs are not even paid for, but given from one
fan to another. If a really high quality bootleg existed, might not
one be tempted to have a friend make a copy, and then not buy an
existing live album? You and I might want to own everything BOC puts
out, but maybe a more casual fan would be content with a bootleg, and
not go out and buy a band's legitimate release. This is indeed
another issue, and I believe it is at the heart of copyright laws.
> John
theo
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