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snow lizard wrote:
Peter Larsen wrote: You have been quite thorough in what you have listened for and most helpful. I'm glad to be of help, but I doubt that I could have listened to any of this as thoroughly as anyone involved in writing any of it. There are many many ways of listening to recordings and music, and listening to recordings and listening to music are in themselves very different. It's quite obvious that my first response in this thread was on a clearly stupid level, but if you're willing to try to rationally discuss the issue, I'll be honest about what it is that I'm hearing in these things. It was quite obvious that some read me as digging for gold. [huge skip] By this example, I take it you mean 1 minute, 26 seconds of "Soundscape M79" - the track I downloaded has a running time of 21:01. Yes, there is a similar sound effect here - the pitch is different, but the delay rate seems to be pretty much the same. Again, there are other examples of similarities, but in this one example, there is a similarity, but also a difference. Did Primus record their own performance, or digitally modify yours? Can such a thing be proved? Is it a particularily difficult effect to arrive at? I think it is fairly difficult to replicate the sound of any individual hand built instrument, as what what I think they did: I think they worked on top of my music and modified it on the daw. I will admit that I have not, but the context of the point I was trying to make is that the Primus arrangements work themselves into things that are not in your recording. Traditionally structured compositions with verses, repetition, that sort of thing. Agreed, they have expanded what is - by design - a sketch into something way fuller. I don't mind that per se, but there is the issue of getting arrangers permission prior to making an arrangement and there is the droit morale issue of claiming original ownership to what is not their creation. Your composition does not go in that direction, Not only that, its aim is contrary to it by it being a spontaneously improvised recording. It is not contiguous because I discarded some segments of it to make it fit an LP side without the need of additional processing. although pieces of both are clearly going in an entirely similar direction. There are also a few unique effects in your recording that I don't find in the Primus stuff. Yes, and from a musical point of view it is a shame that they did not contact me for permission and guidelines for how to work with it and its imagery and on top of it. No problem. I've compared and commented, as the thread requested. From an unbiased perspective, I hear a lot of similarities in the effects used, but also a lot of differences. I hear nothing as far as "riffs", or "arrangement" or anything like that that's been taken from your stuff, nor do I think that's what you're claiming. My claim is that they loaded Soundscape M79 into a daw, modified it and worked on, recorded on, segments of it using it as the initial track. While in theory, it is possible that they could have modified your performance, it would mean almost as much work as performing it themselves. That doesn't quite make sense. It is not an awful lot of work to add a bit of more echo in a day and play a wee bit more around with playback speeds. It is simple, it is fast and it is tempting to record variations of it on top of it. I can't see what difficulty that should preclude that being done, it would be extremely simple on my Audition equipped Athlon. I can understand a protective instinct from anyone who writes music, and there are many similarities, but from my perspective, the question seems ambiguous at best. Such issues unavoidably are. Don't read me as detracting from what they have added, it is not all my stuff they play, of course not. What I mind is not getting credited and not having been asked. There is enough information in the ID-tag on the mp3 file from mp3.com to find me via a bit of googling. I don't think it's impossible for more than 2 people to arrive at a string scrape with delay on it, unlikely as it may be. True some of the way, but sound of hand built spanish guitar is less easy to replicate and I would be very surprised if their studio contain a Beocord with its distinctive delay time. Nonetheless, there are sections that clearly sound remarkably similar. I'm not sure if it's within the spirit of Primus to use someone else's work, and I'm not sure of the spirit of what you're trying to achieve, Multiple things, credit for my work comes to mind. but I don't think I've heard evidence of your recording in theirs. A very early comment made by someone was to the effect that a LARGE artist like the Great Primus Group could not possibly have - ahem - borrowed from some overseas newbie, and implicitly that I was just making the point to dig for gold. Not at all your point, but it did set the tone of the early feedback. In summary, perhaps that horse does need a rest, we agree that we disagree, and isn't that what usenet is really all about? What I think happened was that they found the mp3 file and assumed that it would be public domain by being found on mp3.com or perhaps even that it got relayed to them without the mp3.com source reference and just used it in ignorance of the actual copyright rules that apply and possibly without ever getting the ID3 tag displayed. It was more or less by chance that I discovered that it contains the info I put into the on site questionnaire, and I am glad that I downloaded the file from mp3.com to verify that it was OK. Good luck to you, Peter. And to you indeed, thank you again. Life would be simpler if I could agree with you that "borrowing" has not taken place and that the similarities are random, my opinion has to remain that they are too many and too close to be anything but partial identicality, i.e. that some things are completely identical. Because of your points - and because getting a spare CD/DVD box from the US took extra time (first shipment disappeaered en route) - I ended up giving it a longer rest than I had planned. The difference between the sound on the CD and on the EP is surprising due to the overcompression of the CD, it is technically fascinating that the mastering choices are so dissimilar. Some details are more audible on the CD, but I have found it most fair to compare with the EP version, also because it is way more pleasant to listen to. sl Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
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