From the thread about Bandcamp -
Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on October 27, 2023, 10:12:48 AMSo what would be the future of abundant recycling of other peoples sounds/voices/samples in industrial noise releases?
Good question. Or of any genre that doesn't have money and lawyers backing it up to clear samples?
I always come back to Negativland on this issue. They of course famously had a lot of hassle with this, and their reaction was pretty much anything recorded and put out to the public should be public use as far as remixing and sampling was concerned. If I remember right, they compared it to the age old musical tradition of just taking what was there before and re-using it. It's pretty much how music, all art really, evolves. You put legal blocks on that and you get no evolution, or very little.
It's a radical position that I like, but with caveats based on personal experience. Some years ago a mate and I did some collaborative recording, and a whole seven-plus minute track of ours was used as part of a longer, twenty-or-so minute thing by some project called, if I remember, Siesm or something like that (I do remember he called the whole of his piece "Blue Skies of War"), without any attribution or permission. This was on a now redundant mp3 hosting site. When I contacted this person, saying that we wouldn't have minded him using it if he had just asked us or even mentioned where he got it from, he didn't reply but the piece in question disappeared offline. We didn't care about money (there was none in question), or even that he used our stuff (we were flattered). More the rudeness.
I suppose Negativland was thinking about popular music and other audio that would be obviously recognised? But even that has it's issues. If anyone else had that book of theirs', "The Letter U and the Numeral 2", you'd remember it had a cd with it that had a lot of audio that, among other things, criticised pop artists for sueing for copyright infringements. The mentioned, in passing, Tom Waits. As it happened, it was because some commercial had someone imitating Waits to get around getting permission to use his actual music. I think it's legitimate Waits would want to preserve his integrity at least on that matter. So nothing's totally cut and dried.
But what would this have to do with our scene? We're all just nobodies, noodling away at home and lifting samples from anything at will. Anything from obscure shit on YT to obviously identifiable stuff from mainstream movies. Sampling has always been important to Industrial and beyond, and it should stay that way. But the law in various countries and internationally moves fast, keeping up with the whims of cooperates, leaving the rest of us a bit more vulnerable. In the case of Bandcamp, it looks like what was for a while a great resource might become more hostile. Time to adjust yet again.