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Student seeks new trial in music downloading case

By Associated Press   |  Music  |  February 23, 2010

BOSTON (AP) — A lawyer for a graduate student ordered to pay four music companies a combined $675,000 for downloading and sharing songs online has asked a federal judge to reduce the penalty or order a new trial.

Harvard Law School professor Charles Nesson said in court Tuesday that Joel Tenenbaum only caused the companies to lose a total of $21 when he failed to pay 99 cents charged online for each of the 30 songs in question.

Tenenbaum, a Boston University student from Providence, R.I., admitted to downloading music and was penalized in July of violating copyright rules for downloading songs between 1999 and 2007.

His lawyers appealed against the “severe” and “oppressive” damage award, asking that it be reduced to 99 cents for each song.

The recording labels have described Tenenbaum as a “hardcore” infringer.

___

Information from: The Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/globe

Posted in MusicComments (0)

How they work: FreeAllMusic and Guvera

By Associated Press   |  Music  |  February 18, 2010

The hardest part about both FreeAllMusic.com and Guvera.com is clearing the waiting list to get invited to join. After that, there are two different ways of finding songs to download.

At FreeAllMusic.com:

— Users can search by song, artist or album or can pick one from a list of top hits.

— Then they pick a song and choose from a range of advertisers to sponsor the download. Users watch one video ad featuring that brand. One click later, and the song downloads to the user’s computer and can be transferred to a portable device. Users can get five songs a week.

— Advertisers on Free All Music pay about $2 for the right to present one video ad. Each download also sets off a slew of 150 ads that are spread to other music-related sites on the Internet, such as AOL Music. These display ads let others know that a user downloaded a particular song for free, thanks to the advertising sponsor. Users must opt in to be part of the campaign.

At Guvera.com:

— Users must fill out a profile and list favorites in an array of categories from food to music. People who fill out more surveys get more credits to spend on music, but it also makes them better subjects for targeted ads. The credits can eventually be tapped out: Companies sponsor only a certain number of downloads per customer.

— Searching for a song brings the user to a list of advertisers willing to sponsor the download. After clicking on one, the user is taken to an advertiser-branded page and can download from there. However, just getting there can be tricky. The company is working on making navigation easier to understand.

Posted in MusicComments (0)

Apple’s own approach to iPad e-books could confuse

By Associated Press   |  Music  |  January 31, 2010

NEW YORK (AP) — Even as Apple’s iPad will likely energize electronic reading, the new device is undermining a painstakingly constructed effort by the publishing industry to make it possible to move e-books between different electronic readers.

The slim, 1.5-pound “tablet” computer unveiled last week will be linked to Apple Inc.’s first e-book store when it goes on sale in a few months. The books, however, will not be compatible with Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle or with the major alternative e-book system.

Apple’s creation of a third choice is likely to further frustrate and confuse consumers if they accumulate e-books for one device, then try to go back to read them later on a different one. The effect could be akin to having to buy a new set of CDs every time you get a new stereo system. It could also keep people from buying new e-readers as better models come out if they aren’t compatible with the books they already have.

This could cool consumers’ enthusiasm for e-books, the way sales of digital music downloads were hampered by a variety of copy-protection schemes.

“There are going to be some potentially painful lessons” for consumers when they try to move e-books they already own to new devices, said Nick Bogaty, senior manager of digital publishing business development at Adobe Systems Inc., which provides the major alternative e-book system.

Before the iPad’s debut, there have been two main camps in the e-book industry.

The e-books that Amazon sells work only on the Kindle and on Amazon’s software, which can be loaded for free on PCs and some smart phones. Everyone else, including Sony Corp., Barnes & Noble Inc. and public libraries, have gathered around Adobe’s system.

Adobe doesn’t sell books itself, but provides software to booksellers and libraries so they can sell and lend books that can be opened on multiple devices. Like the Kindle store, the Adobe system uses a copy-protection system that prevents buyers from reselling the books or distributing them online.

Apple would not comment about the plans for its bookstore, but Adobe said its system isn’t being used by Apple.

Apple already has its own copy-protection system for iTunes and can easily extend that to e-books.

“I don’t see Apple feeling like they need to come in as ‘the collaborator.’ That’s not their style,” Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey said.

Apple has said it would embrace the EPUB format for its e-books. Although that’s the format adopted by the Adobe camp, that alone does not ensure compatibility because Apple would be using its own copy-protection scheme on top of it.

Apple is thus set to create a third technology camp in the e-book industry. Consumers who start buying e-books and want to go back to their books after a few years would have to make sure they have a compatible device, or at least compatible software. That can be pretty complicated.

Even if Apple uses its own copy-protection system, it doesn’t preclude books using the Kindle or the Adobe scheme from being read on the iPad or an iPhone as long as Apple continues to allow outside parties to develop e-reading software for the Apple devices. The user would just have to remember which book goes with which software.

However, it’s unlikely that books bought from Apple’s store would work on non-Apple devices, except for PCs running iTunes.

So far, no media industry has managed to unite on one copy-protection system for downloads. Music retailers, including Apple, used a variety of schemes before ultimately ditching copy protection entirely as customers found the limitations to be a big hassle. Music from iTunes couldn’t be moved to a digital media player linked to Microsoft’s store, and so forth.

Movies and television shows are still sold and rented with multiple copy-protection systems, though, so you can’t move an iTunes video to a Microsoft Zune player.

Forrester’s McQuivey believes the division into several e-book camps will persist for years, but may eventually narrow to just two alternatives, one of them being Amazon’s.

He doesn’t believe copy protection will ever go away for e-books. It died for music largely because CDs were never copy-protected, he noted, so consumers opted to buy them and convert them to digital files instead of buying downloads. Printed books, though they carry no copy protection, are difficult to convert to a digital format in the home.

As the market leader, Amazon has the scale to hold out with its own system, McQuivey said. Analysts estimate it has sold 3 million Kindles, and Amazon says it now sells six Kindle books for every 10 printed copies of books that are available in both formats.

All the same, the publishing industry has high hopes for the iPad, which unlike the Kindle and most other e-readers, will have a color screen that can show video.

Carolyn Reidy, the CEO of Simon & Schuster, said the iPad seems like a “terrific device,” citing the clear screen and the ability to turn pages by touching a finger to the screen, as opposed to pushing a button, as the Kindle requires.

She said the fact that Apple already has 125 million customer credit card numbers through its iTunes store could add millions of potential book customers when the iPad goes on sale in two months, starting at $499.

Any disappointment because of confusion over copy protection could be offset, at least in the short term, by the excitement and publicity caused by trendsetter Apple’s entry into the e-book market.

___

AP National Writer Hillel Italie in New York contributed to this report.

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John Legend helps shine Sundance light on schools

By Associated Press   |  Documentaries, R&B  |  January 26, 2010

A convenient truth greeted John Legend when the singer contacted documentary director Davis Guggenheim about collaborating on a film to examine the nation’s public-school system.

Legend had been working with the hip-hop group the Roots on an album exploring 1960s and ’70s music, which led to a discussion about the civil-rights movement and then education, which he considers the civil-rights issue of our time.

The Grammy winner whose albums include “Evolver” and “Get Lifted” thought Guggenheim, an Academy Award winner for his global-warming documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,” was just the man to look at what’s wrong with America’s public schools.

Read the full story

Posted in Documentaries, R&BComments (0)

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Report: The Who releases Super Bowl playlist

By Jonathan Tully   |  Rock, Sports  |  January 26, 2010

The Who plan to present a medley of their classics at halftime of the Super Bowl. (Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images)

The Who plan to present a medley of their classics at halftime of the Super Bowl. (Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images)

Pete Townshend, longtime guitarist for The Who, told Billboard magazine about the “compact medley” the band will be playing at Super Bowl XXIV at Sun Life Stadium.

The set was conceived by lead singer Roger Daltrey, along with Pete’s brother and longtime Who collaborator Simon Townshend, executive producer Ricky Kirschner and director Hamish Hamilton.
Read the full story

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Feb. 4 Clematis by Night all about Super Bowl XLIV

By Katie McBroom   |  Live Shows  |  January 25, 2010

This special Clematis by Night is an official Super Bowl Celebration of the South Florida Super Bowl XLIV Host Committee featuring a football frenzy of activities including: professional athletes, two stages of entertainment, interactive sports games, contests, prizes and a Spirit Competition between cheerleaders and bands from Palm Beach County schools. At 7:45 p.m. on the Meyer Amphitheatre Stage will be Starship featuring Mickey Thomas. The Gypsy Lane Band will perform party music from reggae to disco at 6 p.m. on the Centennial Square Stage.

What: Super Bowl Clematis by Night featuring The Gypsy Lane Band on the Centennial Stage; Starship featuring Mickey Thomas on the Meyer Amphitheatre Stage.

When: 5 to 9 p.m. Feb. 4 Read the full story

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Perry: Aerosmith looking for a Tyler stand-in

By Post Staff and wire services   |  Rock  |  January 25, 2010
Steven Perry and Joe Perry of Aerosmith present during the 2008 American Music Awards. (Getty Images file)

Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith present during the 2008 American Music Awards. (Getty Images file)

Aerosmith is looking for a replacement for lead singer Steven Tyler — whether it’s a permanent job or not remains to be seen.

Guitarist Joe Perry told the Toronto Sun (link via antimusic.com) that Tyler, whose fall off the stage in Sturgis, N.D. in August ended the band’s tour abruptly, hasn’t come right out and said what his status is in the band.

From what I’ve heard, he hasn’t left the band,” Perry told the Sun. “As far as I’m concerned, he hasn’t left the band. He’s never said he was going to leave the band. It’s just that he wanted to go off and do some of his own things. He just never told anybody in the band about it. … He has to have leg surgery and foot surgery and it’s basically going to take him out of the picture for about a year, year and a half.”
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Review: A subdued Mariah slays ‘em at the Hard Rock

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Concert Reviews, Music  |  January 24, 2010

mariah-415The artist: Mariah Carey

Where: Seminole Hard Rock’s Hard Rock Live on Thursday night

The songs we heard: “Touch My Body,” “We Belong Together,” “Shake It Off,” “The Impossible,” crowd singalongs “Always Be My Baby” and “Hero”

The rundown: The last time I saw Mariah Carey in concert, she was in full over-the-top shiny mode. There were dancers – lots of dancers. And boobs. And a giant butterfly shining like a specialized diva Bat Signal, and clown or a mime — can’t remember which one — on hand to run around and fawn, and, at one point, paint Mariah’s picture.

Read the full story

Posted in Concert Reviews, MusicComments (0)

Judge cuts $2M penalty in MN song-sharing case

By Associated Press   |  Music  |  January 22, 2010

MINNEAPOLIS — A federal judge on Friday drastically reduced a nearly $2 million verdict against a Minnesota woman found guilty last year of sharing 24 songs over the Internet, calling the jury’s penalty “monstrous and shocking.”

U.S. District Judge Michael Davis reduced the $1.92 million penalty a jury imposed against Jammie Thomas-Rasset of Brainerd to $2,250 per song, or about $54,000.

“The need for deterrence cannot justify a $2 million verdict for stealing and illegally distributing 24 songs for the sole purpose of obtaining free music,” Davis wrote.

Read the full story

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Prince pens tune about Minnesota Vikings

By Associated Press   |  Music News  |  January 22, 2010

Vikings-Prince Tribute

MINNEAPOLIS – Prince has recorded a purple-tinted tribute to the Minnesota Vikings.

The “Purple Rain” superstar told Fox affiliate KMSP-TV that he penned “Purple and Gold” after he saw the Vikings beat Dallas at the Metrodome last weekend. Prince told the station he hadn’t seen the team play in years until this season.

The Vikings play the Saints in New Orleans on Sunday in the NFC championship game.

The hymn-like Vikings song from the Minnesota rocker includes the lyrics, “Raise every voice and let it b’ known/in the name of the purple and gold.”

Wide receiver Bernard Berrian thanked Prince for the song on his Twitter page, saying “He is definitely one of my favorites.”

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