Rage Against the Immigration Laws

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

While Massachusetts Senate President Therese Murray and a handful of Democratic Senators were busy outflanking their Republican colleagues on the right in the we hours of the morning of May 27 by crafting the most conservative immigration measure to hit the state in a good long time, Zac de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine was equally busy spearheading a musical boycott of Arizona, where the most draconian immigration law in the country (SB 1070) has already prompted significant outrage. “The Sound Strike”—as the boycott is called—has attracted outspoken musicians from Kanye West to Sonic Youth, with others getting on board as I write. (The full list of artists who have joined the Sound Strike can be seen at their official Website.) They are protesting a law that has been widely criticized for encouraging law enforcement to detain anyone who looks Latino. Why Massachusetts would want to get on that bandwagon remains a mystery.

The Sound Strike has yet to attract any of the big name pop or rock acts that can sell out stadiums and no country acts have yet joined the cause. But it has galvanized Latino artists across the musical spectrum. Linda Ronstadt, an Arizonan of Mexican descent, has spoken out against the law.

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Jukeboxes in the Clouds

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

In 2003, Steve Jobs railed against music subscription services, telling Rolling Stone that “People want to own their music.” Now it appears that Apple might be changing its iTune. Apple’s recent $80 million plus purchase of music subscription service Lala suggests that the company that made it easy (and legal) to download digital music files to your iPod or computer might now be envisioning the future of music as a big jukebox in the clouds. One big question is where this will leave users? Another is where it will leave musicians.

People thought Jobs was prescient when he opined in 2003 that music subscription services “are going to fail. Music Net’s gonna fail, Press Play’s gonna fail … . You don’t want to rent your music.” He was right about that. And more recent ventures have borne him out; RealNetwork’s Rhapsody and Best Buy’s current incarnation of Napster have yet to show any real results. So why Apple’s change of tune? In a word — smartphones. Storage strapped hand-held digital devices have wrested some control from wireless carriers over which mobile apps one can use (including music apps), but they can’t compete for storage with the 160 GB of music one can store on a computer.

Then along came imeem — a social media network whose music locker service allowed users to store 80GB of music on their servers, which could then be streamed to a smartphone.

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Blackface Minstrelsy: Alive and Ill

Friday, October 16th, 2009

I begin my course on the Social History of Popular Music with a unit on blackface minstrelsy—a 19th century form of entertainment in which white performers with blackened faces parodied their perceptions of African American culture. Students are usually shocked to learn that this practice constituted part of the foundation of US popular music. The class ends with a discussion of the degree to which images of minstrelsy can still be found in our popular culture. Well, I am here to report that minstrelsy is still alive and ill. In the past few of weeks a couple of dramatic instances of the use of blackface have surfaced in the media.

In early October 2009, the Austrailian TV talent show Hey Hey It’s Saturday Reunion presented a Michael Jackson tribute act called the Jackson Jive, who performed in blackface. Taken aback, judge Harry Connick Jr. gave the group a “0.” “If they turned up looking like that in the United States,” said Connick, “Hey, hey, there’s no more show.” Ironically, the same group had appeared on the same show 20 years earlier doing the same performance and won! Here is their performance:

The October 2009 issue of French Vogue, which is dedicated to “supermodels,” reportedly used no black models and, adding insult to injury, model Lara Stone appears in a 14-page spread in blackface.

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Why Tweet, when you can HONK!

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

HONK! Festival - Oct 9-11 - Davis Square, Somerville

HONK! Is a new name for a time-honored tradition of street music that is acoustic and mobile, activist and engaged, borrowing repertoire and inspiration from a diversity of traditions: It’s New Orleans; it’s Klezmer; it’s Samba—with all the passion and spirit of Mardi Gras and Carnivale.

HONK! is totally fun, free, completely non-commercial, inclusive, participatory, and community-based.

Imagine the scene: Activist marching bands from across the country and around the world fanning out to Boston neighborhoods on Friday Oct 9; two dozen bands honking their hearts out for free in Davis Square all day Saturday, Oct 10; then struttin’ and strollin’ our way to Harvard Square on Sunday Oct 11 for rousing performances at Oktoberfest; wrapping up the weekend with a killer all-band blow-out at the historic Somerville Theater in Davis Square on Sunday night at 8 PM.

HONK! Schedule

Friday, Oct 9, 3 - 6 pm HONK! on Boston: Visiting bands play alongside local community bands in East Somerville, East Boston, Roxbury, Dorchester, Chinatown and the Boston Common

Saturday, Oct 10, Noon - 9 pm HONK! on Davis Square: 25 activist street bands, from around the country and beyond, perform outdoors for free

Sunday, Oct 11, Noon - 2 pm HONK! Parade down Mass Ave.

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Michael Jackson RIP

Friday, June 26th, 2009
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$80,000 for a song

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

In the continuing saga of discontinuing its strategy of suing individuals for file-sharing, the music industry has just scored one of its biggest awards ever. On June 18, 2009, Jammie Thomas-Rasset was convicted of sharing 24 copyrighted songs. Federal law allows the recording industry to recover $750 to $30,000 per infringement, but in this case the jury decided to raise that figure $80,000 per song because they found the infringement “willful.” That comes to a whopping $1.92 million for the music industry. As Ken Port, a lawyer who has been following the case, told the Washington Post, “They now have a verdict they can use in other cases around America. The prices that they will charge for settling is going to go up.” Thomas-Rasset was originally convicted of copyright violation in a 2007 trial and was ordered to pay $222,000. She was granted a retrial, in part because the presiding judge was convinced that the fine was excessive. The new judgment is more than eight times the original sum. Kiwi Camara, one of Thomas-Rasset’s attorneys, said: “There really is a problem with the statute, because she’s been fined $1.9 million for stealing 24 songs that went for about $1.99 on iTunes,” slightly overstating the cost of songs on the site.

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The Pirate Bay Four: Guilty

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

If you have been following the peer-to-peer file-sharing saga from Napster through Grokster, Morpheus, and KaZaA, you may know that a new chapter has been added. On Friday, Apr 17, the verdict was announced in the closely watched Swedish trial of IFPI vs The Pirate Bay: All four Pirate Bay founders, accused of “assisting in making copyright content available,” were found guilty, and sentenced to a year in prison and fines totalling approximately $3.5million. In keeping with The Pirate Bay’s philosophy of information sharing, co-founder Peter Sunde (aka Brokep) posted the verdict on Twitter, in effect releasing it to the world, before it was read aloud in Stockholm District Court. Sir Paul McCartney told NME that he thought the verdict “fair.” Another member of the Pirate Bay Four, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg (aka Anakata), however, said “the record companies can go screw themselves.”

Naturally, the music industry sees the verdict as a huge victory. But it is unclear whether the judgement has any practical value at this point. The appeals process could drag on for years. Furthermore, the site itself was not on trial, only the four founders. And they insist that The Pirate Bay, reportedly the largest host of BitTorrent trackers in the world, will continue.

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Shining a light on p2p lawsuits

Monday, April 20th, 2009

After suing some 35,000 individuals since 2003, ranging from a pre-teen living in New York public housing to a 71 year old grandfather from texas, the music industry finally announced on December 19, 2008, that they were discontinuing the controversial practice, which had become nothing short of a new multi-million dollar revenue stream for the industry. Well, kinda/sorta. While they have stopped initiating new suits, they are plowing ahead with those already in progress, even though that seems to fly in the face of the logic of their recent decision.

One of the cases that seems to be going to trial is RIAA vs. Joel Tenenbaum, a 25-year-old doctoral student in physics at Boston University, who stands accused of downloading seven songs illegally from a peer-to-peer network when he was 17. For this, he faces potential damages of more than $1 million. But Tenenbaum’s case has an interesting twist. His lawyer, Charles Nesson, a founder of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard, petitioned District Court Judge Nancy Gertner to allow the trial to be streamed over the internet, and Gertner agreed.

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Amandla: The Video

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Thirty years ago this July 21, there was an historic concert in Harvard Stadium called “Amandla: Festival of Unity,” its name taken from the Zulu word for “the power that gives freedom.” This seven-hour, sun-drenched celebration of cultural power featured Bob Marley and the Wailers, Patti Labelle, Eddie Palmieri, Olatunji, Jabula, and special guest Dick Gregory. Amandla was no ordinary festival.

An amazing concert photo from an amazing day.

Bob Marley at Amandla, Harvard Stadium, July 21, 1979

With South Africa still under apartheid, Nelson Mandela languishing in prison on Robben Island, and black revolutionary organizations engaged in armed struggle against white minority rule throughout the region, Amandla dared to be “a benefit concert for relief and humanitarian aid” for the liberation organizations of the frontline states, all of whom sent their official UN delegations to the event. It would not be stretching the point to say that Amandla was a magical blend of music and politics that made an indelible mark that lives on in the hearts and minds of the thousands of people who were in attendance. Everyone who came was totally in synch with the spirit of the day; from artists and audience members to the barefoot doctors and people’s security who had been specially trained for six months to insure an uplifting and empowering event with a clear message of unity and social justice both in southern Africa and at home in Boston.

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Brass Unbound

Monday, April 13th, 2009

For the past couple of years, I have been heavily involved in organizing the HONK! Festival and playing in the Second Line Social Aid and Pleasure Society Brass Band, the band that kinda/sorta hosts this killer anarcho-democratic-participatory festival of activist street bands. The two dozen or so brass bands that show up to play at the festival are not your mother’s marching bands. Brass has come a long way since the janissary bands of the Ottoman Empire tried to strike fear into the hearts of their enemies. To give an example, here’s a short film that students at Tufts University made about HONK! 2008:

Download Title

Our own HONK! Festival has spawned HonkFest West, where I just spent a wicked cool Easter weekend drumming and carousing in the streets of Seattle. Honk is now finding its way into every nook and cranny of popular culture, world-wide. Check out Josh Kun in the Times (read the full stories). And check out the video at the end. Infectious, easy to play! I think we’re on to something here.

They’re With the Band, Speaking That Global Language: Brass

By JOSH KUN, New York Times | April 9, 2006

. . . Los Lobos brought out Los Cenzontles, a Northern California banda troupe.

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Welcome to DiscoTech

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

I have finally decided to enter the wonderful world of blogging. So welcome to DiscoTech, a blog dedicated to all things music. From the production and performance of benefit concerts to the study of music as a social indicator, I want to promote the use of music as a community resource and an educational tool. For the last 10-15 years, as an educator, I have been compiling extensive research archives on topics as diverse as race and gender issues in popular music, copyright law and peer-to-peer file sharing, music and emotion, the effects of globalization on the music industry, protest music, and post-9/11 culture wars, all the while trying to maintain an activist role as a cultural worker and a performing musician.

The plan is to use this blog publish in-process commentary on my current research and community projects, and, over time, to make available the archives of web-based resources I have developed for my courses on the Social History of Popular Music, Music and Politics, and Media Literacy. Hopefully this will be a labor of love and a useful exercise, rather than one more mundane data-entry task. Your active involvement and comments will make it more likely to become the former.

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