#93 Music Piracy
March 30, 2008 by clander
White people have always been renowned for having ridiculously large music collections. So when file sharing gave white people a chance to acquire all the music they ever wanted, it felt as though it was an earned right and not a privilege.
When (not if) you see a white male with a full iPod, ask him if all of his music is legal. If he does not immediately launch into a diatribe about his right to pirate music, you might have to nudge him a bit by saying “do you think that’s right?” The response will be immediate and uniform.
He will likely rattle off statistics about how most musicians don’t make any money from albums, it all comes from touring and merchandise. So by attending shows, he is able to support the musicians while simultaneously striking a blow against multinational corporations. He will proceed to walk you through the process of how record labels are set up to reward the corporation and fundamentally rob the artist of their rights, royalties and creativity. Prepare to hear the name Steve Albini a lot.
Advanced white people will also talk about how their constant downloading of music makes them an expert who can properly recommend bands to friends and co-workers, thus increasing revenues and exposure. So in fact, their “illegal” activities are the new lifeblood of the industry.
When they have finished talking, you must choose your next words wisely. It is considered rude to point out the simple fact that they are still getting music for free. Instead you should say: “Wow, I never thought of it like that. You know a lot about the music industry. What bands are you listening to right now? Who is good?”
This sentence serves two functions: it helps to reassure the white person that they are your local “music expert,” something they prize. Also, it lets them feel as though they have convinced you that their activities are part of a greater social cause and not simple piracy.
If you bring up this issue with white person who says “nah bro, I don’t give a shit, Dave Matthews has enough money as it is.” You are likely dealing with wrong kind of white person.
In the even more rare situation where someone says “it’s all paid for, and it’s all transferred from vinyl.” You have found an expert level white person and must treat the situation carefully. 
Because of the availability of music online, a very strict social hierarchy has been created within white culture whereby someone with a large MP3 collection is considered “normal,” a large CD collection is considered to be “better,” and a person with a large vinyl collection is recognized as “elite.”
These elite white people abhor the fact that music piracy has made their B-sides, live performances, and bootlegs available to the masses. Their entire life’s work has been stripped of its rarity in terms of both object and sound on the record. The best thing you can say to them is: “vinyl still sounds better.”
However, it is recommended that you do not let this conversation drag much longer. If you let them continue talking to you they are likely to spend hours talking to you about bands you’ve never heard of and providing you with a weekly mix CD of rarities that you do not want.





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The only music I have bought since my cd collection was stolen was the online radiohead release, largely becuase white people like to feel like they are supporting the artist (especially indie stuff) instead of the music industry. I download free music because I like to think that musicians have to make music for the artform rather for profits. But really I’m just a cheap ass. It’s really scary how much of this crap is true….
I don’t plan on ever paying another cent for music ever again. I already have spent thousands of dollars on CDs that were grossly overpriced. A CD costs about 2 cents to make yet the record companies were charging the public $22. Karma’s a b!tch for those execs who were rolling in the dough before mp3s came along.
Music downloading is a RIGHT. Call it piracy or whatever you want. Our forefathers fought in WWII against Hitler and his armies so we can have the freedom to download music for free. Record companies are just another way to dictate what you listen to. Dictate=Hitler=Record Label…see my point. It’s that simple.
The batshit crazy suits of the RIAA need to get real jobs. Their free ride robbing the artists is over. I’ll buy discs and MP3s from local artists, but I’m real reluctant to pay anything to the big record companies. About everyone I know feels the same. What is is with successful bands and artists always in debt to the company? Why are no royalties paid on albums which have gone platinum? Being signed to a major label seems to be the new slavery.
lol
I love this because it it true
i did new cds…
*cough*
There are people who pay to listen to music on the web I mean anything their heart desires.
But what a lot of people don’t know is that there is free software out there that are called sound card recorders and they will record and sound that your computer makes from the sound card dig? Which means you can record any song in mp3 format for your mp3 players or wave format to make cds.
http://www.culturallycool.com/musicindex.html
“nah bro, I don’t give a shit, Dave Matthews has enough money as it is.” lol
I also like free shit. I’m a cheap little bitch who hates to pay for anything. But man this site is funny.
free rock rocks
I approve of pirating music not because of its moral value but because I like free shit.
Free food rocks. Free music rocks even more.
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