John Oswald, pioneer of the aural collage: the futility of law in the face of technology it cannot control.
I’ve written at length in this blog about compositions consisting of digital remixes of pre-recorded samples and the contentious and utterly unresolved tensions between copyright, fair use, and the extra-legal reality of practices that cannot be controlled by legal rules. I’ve written about artists as varied as Negativland, Girl Talk, Steinski, and Kutiman, among others. Negativland and Steinski were pioneers in the genre, composing their aural collages back in the ancient days before digital media made the stitching together of digital information something one could do sitting in front of a laptop in bed.
But no one was there before John Oswald of Plunderphonics. A mere fraction of his career’s chronology demonstrates that he is perhaps the pioneer of the genre:
1973-75
With the sanction of William S. Burroughs, John Oswald cut up recordings of him reading his texts advocating cutting up methods, & consequently discovered an acoustic pallindrome, mediations between backwards & forwards, polysyllabic masking & phase imploding.
1975
Oswald melds a radio evangelist with alleged satanists Led Zepplin in the early rap track POWER. released in 1995 by Musicworks magazine.
1975-85
MYSTERY TAPES assembly & dissemination (by Mystery Tapes Etc.International), include many early plunderphonistic experiments.
1980
Oswald guest produces a one hour radio show for CFRO in Vancouver called Sounds Wrong which includes the first public issues of Dolly Parton & Rite of Spring transformations.
1982
Collusion, a British magazine publishes an article by Oswald, entitled “Revolutions & Mr Dolly Parton – a vortex of of androgeny”.
1985
An essay by John Oswald entitled “Plunderphonics, or, Audio Piracy as a Compositional Prerogative” was presented at the Wired Society conference in Toronto.
1988
The original Plunderphonics EP (never-for-sale, out-of-print) was for its time the most extreme example of sampling ever produced. Four well-known music personalities representing four musical genres & four notable epochs of recording history were presented in surprising ways, or, as the press release put it: warp drive.
1989
The Plunderphonic CD (never-for-sale, remaining stocks destroyed by Michael Jackson & CBS) has become an underground cult classic. The realistic cover photo of a nude Michael Jackson revealed as a white woman paralleled the musical transformations depicted on the disc. Other electroquoted artists included Bing Crosby, The Beatles, Glenn Gould, Public Enemy & (consequently) James Brown.
You can read a more complete biography of Oswald here.
Far more interesting is an extensive recorded interview with Oswald. One of the most fascinating parts of the interview is Oswald’s account of his experience with the overwhelming legal forces brought to bear in the name of copyright enforcement against his new compositions. In a series of events not unlike those experienced by Negativland in connection with their composition U2, every last CD Oswald retained of his recording was destroyed. Of course, he had already distributed some of those CDs and was unable to recover them. And we all know digital media metastasize beyond any capacity of corporate control. So, of course, as with Negativland’s U2, Oswald’s recording not only continues to exist; it is available (for free) for digital downloading.
For your listening pleasure, I include here one track from the album: Glenn Gould-Aria(mp3).
Steinski: The Motorcade Sped On (for November 22)
Why hasn’t Girl Talk been sued? My answer, sampled and remixed in a new article
Why hasn’t Greg Gillis, who performs and records as Girl Talk, been sued despite (1) the fact his music consists entirely of recorded samples of other recordings, (2) his high profile and success, and (3) the music industry’s insistence — based on very shaky legal grounds — that no recorded sample can be appropriated without permission?
Well, I’ve been saying it for a long time, and I believe I was the first — Gillis is just too good:
I am a lawyer just like the lawyers representing Metallica, the Guess Who, and anyone else whose work has been sampled and repurposed by Gillis. And if were advising one of these clients (or I were representing the RIAA and could influence the lawyers for Metallica and the Guess Who), I would advise that client not to sue Girl Talk; Gillis’s argument that he has transformed the copyrighted materials sufficiently that his work constitutes non-inringing fair use is just too good. I’d go after someone I am more likely to beat. Othewise, I’d lose all the leverage I have with the existence, as yet undisputed in case law, of the decisions in Grand Upright Music and Bridgeport Music.
And now comes Joe Mullin, of paidContent.org explaining Why The Music Industry Isn’t Suing Mashup Star ‘Girl Talk“:
So why hasn’t Gillis been hauled in front of a judge by the music industry? Probably because he’s the most unappealing defendant imaginable. Gillis would be a ready-made hero for copyright reformers; if he were sued, he’d have some of the best copyright lawyers in the country knocking on his door asking to take his case for free.
At the Electronic Frontier Foundation, probably the most well-funded public interest group working in the copyright space, lawyers have made it clear for years that they’re positively eager to litigate a case over music sampling, which they believe is a clear-cut case of fair use.
And I’ve said it before myself. I’d love to represent Gillis in that case should it ever come about.
Innovation comes from remixing what we already have.
I’ve written frequently about the myth that creative genius is the product of solitary inspiration and the ways that myth reinforces notions of intellectual property that, under the pretense of rewarding innovation, in fact stifle innovation by preventing the re-use and remixing of existing ideas, creations, and inventions. In reviewing Steven Johnson‘s Where New Ideas Come From, Paul Crowe makes the point that
Greek philosophers said nothing comes from nothing, a new idea, actually a new anything, is simply a rearrangement or unique new combination of things that already exist. When you think of it that way, coming up with new ideas isn’t about having that mysterious “creative” ability, it might be more about a willingness to try lots of new combinations to see what might work, and, hey, anyone can do that, you just need desire and effort.
Stealing what you love
John Pareles wrote, in “Plagiarism in Dylan, or a Cultural Collage?,”that “[i]deas aren’t meant to be carved in stone and left inviolate; they’re meant to stimulate the next idea and the next.” Accordingly, in words apropos of a point I’ve made over and over and over on this blog, he explains:
The absolutely original artist is an extremely rare and possibly imaginary creature, living in some isolated habitat where no previous works or traditions have left any impression. Like virtually every artist, Mr. Dylan carries on a continuing conversation with the past. He’s reacting to all that culture and history offer, not pretending they don’t exist. Admiration and iconoclasm, argument and extension, emulation and mockery — that’s how individual artists and the arts themselves evolve. It’s a process that is neatly summed up in Mr. Dylan’s album title “Love and Theft, ” which itself is a quotation from a book on minstrelsy by Eric Lott. (hyperlinks added)
Another masterful artist, David Foster Wallace, wrote, “No one who is invested in any kind of art . . . can read [Lewis Hyde's book] The Gift and remain unchanged.” It is Hyde’s thesis not merely that all art builds on earlier art, but that it is precisely the artist’s recognition that his creations are gifts that sustains his creativity. In other words, the capacity to create is a gift given to the artist and is given only if the artist understands his own creations as gifts themselves that other artists can use themselves in their acts of creation:
It is the assumption of this book that a work of art is a gift, not a commodity. Or, to state the modern case with more precision, that works of art exist simultaneously in two “economics,” a market economy and a gift economy. Only one of these is essential, however: a work of art can survive without the market, but where there is no gift there is no art.
So it should be no surprise that Andreas Hykade entitled this brilliant video “Love & Theft“:
RiP! A Remix Manifesto
Filmmaker Brett Gaylor’s RiP! A Remix Manifesto, now available on Hulu.
In an interview conducted by Rebecca Harper, Gaylor, among many other things, discussed the inspiration he drew from Brazilian culture, which apparently suffers no anxiety from the recognition that creativity is inherently built on earlier creation:
[A]s I made the film, I had to amass a lot of knowledge about copyright law. Maybe not what surprised me, but certainly what inspired me was the history of appropriation in Brazil, and how going back to the very beginning of Brazilian culture, there was this history of fair use and appropriation. And you know, we have that in North American culture, as well, with things like the Blues and obviously hip-hop. But what really struck me about Brazilian culture was how recognized it was, and how there was this culture that seemed to be built on taking influences of Europe, of North America, of their native cultures, and sort of putting them in this big pot and making a stew. That was really inspiring, and I read the works of a Brazilian poet and modernist called Oswald de Andrade. He wrote this thing called The Cannibalist Manifesto, which was basically saying that Brazilian culture needed to eat and ingest the cultures of the world to regurgitate and create something new. I just thought that was a really great metaphor for the digital age and postmodernism. That’s why I decided to go to Brazil and spend a good amount of time there.
How online video creators can make remixes, mashups, and other common online video genres.
American University Professors Pat Aufderheide and Peter Jaszi, have produced the video below in their capacity as principals in American University’s Center for Social Media and AU’s Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property. The video was produced in collaboration with Stanford Law School’s Fair Use Project, and explains how online video creators can make remixes, mashups, and other common online video genres with the knowledge that they are staying within copyright law. (Professor Jaszi happens to be a favorite scholar of mine.)
Girl Talk on Remix Culture
Gregg Gillis, a/k/a Girl Talk, spoke with fans online via the Globe and Mail on his work:
I believe in what I’m doing, so at this point, the fact that there has been no problems feels great. Some of those national publications like to write stories and make it seem like me or Illegal Art are a bunch of idiots, like we just don’t give a fuck and that’s why we’re releasing the music. Completely ignoring the whole idea of Fair Use. It’s definitely not under the radar any more. That was the point I was trying to make. But times are changing. The way the general public views intellectual property in 2009 is much different than in 1999. Look around the internet. So much content comes from pre-existing media. We’re used to it now. Christian Bale goes crazy on the set of T4. That turns into a techno song, which then turns into a cartoon on YouTube, which will then turn into a T-shirt. Everyone is constantly exchanging ideas and building upon previously existing material. So the idea of a remix being a real artform is being validated in our culture every day.
Do your own American remix!
From my friends at Remix America, a site that provides free, online editing software that gives you the tools to remix the great words of our forefathers with the hot-button issues of today:
Lessig’s Conversation of Remix – fair use? Warner Music doesn’t think so.
Lawrence Lessig’s lecture on remix culture, posted to YouTube, was the subject of a DMCA takedown notice by Warner Music. As Lessig explains, “Apparently, YouTube’s content-ID algorithm had found music in the video that they claimed ownership to.” The uploader’s protest to the takedown notice was apparently successful, which reinstates the video while Google reviews the legitimacy of the fair use claim against Warner Music’s copyright infringement claim. Lessig’s blog post, along with the entirety of his lecture, is here. Below is the segement that was blocked and is, for now, restored:
Here’s more on DJ Danger Mouse’s Grey Album. And more on Girl Talk here, here, and here.
Remix America, I salute you!
I am thrilled to have found Remix America¦America’s Digital Public Square. I’m no technical wiz. I’m always looking for easy ways to do technically difficult things. One thing I’ve searched for and asked friends about for a couple of years is a Friedman-friendly way of mixing and mashing up video and audio clips. I’ve wanted the contemporary equivalent (and therefore the multi-media) analog to the mix tapes I used to make on a cassette tape deck, and I need it to be as easy as making a mix tape on a cassette tape deck. My technically intelligent friends have had suggestions, but none have seemed accessible enough to me to be worth the investment of time and/or money they seemed they might require. But now I’m in techno-idiot heaven. As Remix America explains:
RemixAmerica.org is a multi-partisan, non-profit website that uses digital technology to give everyone the chance to own the words, the music, the images and sounds of America in digital form; to remix those expressions and ideas with their own; and to send the products of our community’s creativity out to the world… where others will come back to us and start it all over again…
And it works! I have a long way to go before I’ll be able to create a mashup that deserves to be posted, but, thanks to Remix America, that day is in sight. And I’m flattered beyond words that Erika Johansson, Producer and Program Coordinator for the site, paid me the compliment of writing to me that “we’ve got similar interests and aims.”
Despite the fact she runs circles around me when it comes to actually using the technology, Ms. Johansson is right that our interests and aims are similar. I approach the innovation and creativity that is the subject of this blog as a lawyer, a role not typically considered innovative, creative or artistic. But it’s plain that being a lawyer requires fluency in the technical realities and practicalities one addresses as a lawyer.
I believe the law governing any particular set of circumstances expresses society’s conceptions of what constitutes justice and fairness in those circumstances . In stark contrast, many lawyers and law professors believe law is the product of abstract notions of justice and fairness applied to the world as we find it.
If I am going to write persuasively about any given set of laws, my approach requires that I understand as well as I can the material reality those laws apply to. To understand contract law, I need to understand commercial practices and expectations. To understand market regulation, I need to understand how the financial markets run. To understand copyright law, I need to understand the technical details concerning the production and dissemination of information.
A necessary implication of my approach is that when the material conditions underlying any field change profoundly, the laws that govern that field should change profoundly. And in the last twenty years we’ve experienced a profound change in the material conditions that govern the way we produce, reproduce, and disseminate information. So the law governing the production, reproduction, and dissemination of information has to change — otherwise we’re stuck with the inevitable injustice that arises when you apply rules developed for one set of facts to an entirely different set of facts. There’s a revolution going on, but a lot of people don’t even recognize the revolution. And you can’t begin to understand the revolution unless you understand the the technical details that the revolution consists of.
So Remix America is a godsend to me. It gives me the means to create for myself (very crude) approximations of the mashups and remixes and collages I find so compelling and creative but that many consider theft. If I can understand and actually engage in an approximation of those creative acts, I can understand better and communicate better why those works are genuinely creative works, not merely ripoffs of original works that technology has unlocked.
I salute and give a gracious thank you to Remix America and urge you to go there yourselves, see the works Remix America is making possible, and maybe start remixing and mashing up and creating your own original works.