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Learning Music -- CC music sampler

Cory Doctorow at 12:50 pm Tue, Oct 27, 2009

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John from CC-friendly record label Vosotros sez, "Learning Music is a band from Los Angeles - they release an album of CC music every month through a subscription series called Learning Music Monthly. That's a lot of music to keep up with, so we decided to put together a free anthology of songs from the last six albums. Download it for free and see what you've been missing!"

CASH Music: Learning Music (Thanks, John!)

Previously:
  • Vosotros -- CC friendly label -- first anniversary party this Thu ...
  • Lovely animated video for CC-licensed song - Boing Boing
  • Yes We Puede! CC licensed, public domain patriotic songs for the ...
  • Creative Commons salon in LA this Thursday! - Boing Boing
  • Boing Boing: Brilliant final projects from Cory's class

Read more in Music at Boing Boing

I write books. My latest is a YA science fiction novel called Homeland (it's the sequel to Little Brother). More books: Rapture of the Nerds (a novel, with Charlie Stross); With a Little Help (short stories); and The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow (novella and nonfic). I speak all over the place and I tweet and tumble, too.

MORE:  Copyfight • Culture • music

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  • Jack Daniel

    For a second there I thought I was gonna download a new C+C Music Factory sampler.

  • Anonymous

    @Davidvaughan: You’d have a valid point if a) there were no good albums coming out anymore, at all (are there not?) and b) these albums-a-month are poor quality. I haven’t listened to them. Are they?

  • Davidvaughan

    An album a month.

    So this is where the copyfight has led us – the commoditisation of music!

    Do we really think the quality of music created at this rate will reach the standards seen in the past? Think of your favourite albums – the White Album, say, or What’s Goin’ On, or whatever it is – and ask whether it could have been made under these conditions?

    Seriously, I think you’re reaping what you’ve sown here. Copyfighters have undermined the system which allowed creative musicians a great deal of drug-taking and idleness but which also resulted in great music.

    Did they think of the consequences before engaging on their crusade? I don’t think they did, much. They issued vague proclamations stating that in view of changing circumstances, the music industry would have to adapt. Musicians would have to do more live work. The coked-up A&R executives were about to lose their jobs, and thank goodness.

    But before you hit reply and say “of COURSE great albums will continue to be made, you idiot! Stop being so elitist and just accept that things are changing”, think of the wider picture.

    It takes time to make great art. Conrad wrote sixteen novels but it took him twenty years. It took five years for Junot Diaz to grind out his Pulitzer prize-winning novel ‘Oscar Wao’.

    And now we have a band cranking out an album a month, like factory workers producing their quotas of plastic bottles and baby’s bibs.

    Well, to paraphrase Mencken “copyfighting is the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard”.