5 Legal Cases That Defined Music in 2009

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NEW YORK (Ben Sheffner for Billboard/Reuters) — Almost a decade after the major labels launched their legal assault on Napster, courts are still writing the rules of the road for the music business’s digital future.

Companies can’t set out to build a business based on their users’ infringement of copyright, courts had already ruled. But the precise meaning of that dictate remains in doubt. What steps must sites take to combat infringement? What are the proper penalties for those who infringe? This year, courts inched toward resolution of these questions, giving labels, publishers and artists a bit more certainty as they decide whom to work with and whom to sue.

Below are 2009’s top five cases that will shape the future of the music business.

UMG Recordings v. Veoh Networks

In September, a federal judge in Los Angeles ruled decisively against Universal Music Group in the label’s copyright suit against video-sharing site Veoh.com. UMG had argued to the court that Veoh was liable for copyright infringement by encouraging users to upload videos, which Veoh translated into the proper format, organized and categorized, then ultimately streamed to millions of Web surfers — all without paying copyright owners. But the court held that Veoh qualified for a “safe harbor” under the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, because the site followed a policy of promptly taking down videos upon notification from UMG and kicking “repeat infringers” off the site. [read: Wired]

Listen Up! Best Music of the Millennium … So Far [Wired]

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from Wired

These lists are so biased, but how can they not be. The only way to truly measure the accuracy is by looking back at this list in 10 or 15 years and see the longevity of the band/musician or their impact on the music scene 10 to 15 years from now.  Regardless, there some fun stuff here.

In a decade fueled by hyperconsumption and paranoia, some musicians stood out by balancing cultural relevance, technological innovation and raw lyrical and sonic power.

These artists and their recordings — the best of the millennium so far — significantly upped the ante in their respective genres of rock, pop, hip-hop and beyond (usually by obliterating those labels). These musicians’ beautiful noise will only grow louder as the next decade unfurls.

Listen to top tracks by the standard-bearers below, then let us know your choices for the ’00s finest music in the comments section. [read, listen, watch]

2009 in Review: MacWorld

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This week the “TOP” lists from thing year, 2009 and the first decade of 2000, are everywhere.  Here is one from MacWorld.

We spent most of 2009 listening to an unending stream of information about the world’s financial crisis. But not all the news was bad for Mac businesses. Here are some of the highlights: [read]

Tips on Early Morning Photography

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Plan Your Sunrise Shoot.jpg

As all photographers know, there are two times of day when the light is most ideal for capturing breathtaking images, sunrise and sunset. The reason being is because at these times the angle between the sun and the earth’s surface is small which allows for the sunlight to flow over the landscape in a way that intensifies the colours of nature and also creates spectacular shadows. All in all, it is a photographers dream land!

Planning For Your Early Morning Shoot:

Below are a couple of pointers that will help you effectively plan for your upcoming sunrise shoot so that you don’t miss that perfect shot. (NB: these steps should all be done the day before you plan on shooting the sunrise)

AC/DC Austrian concert in doubt over rare bird risk

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An animal rights group may take legal action if AC/DC goes ahead with its concert in Austria / Reuters

AUSSIE rockers AC/DC could have to cancel a sold-out concert because their big sound poses a danger to rare birds.

Animal rights campaigners are threatening legal action if the veteran band goes ahead with a gig planned for Wels airport in Austria in May.

Hans Uhl of BirdLife said birds nesting in the area at the time would be threatened by anthems such as Highway To Hell and You Shook Me All Night Long. [read]

Quick tip: Combo update [Pro Tools]

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If you’re on Mac OS X, whenever it’s time to update your system make sure you use the combo update on Apples website instead of the software updater in OS X. The combo update file will mount in Finder like a regular disk image.

There have been occasions in the past where people have had problems with Pro Tools after updating OS X and solved them by simply using the combo update. [Source: ProTooler Blog]

Ken Robinson – The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything

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What I’m reading: The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything

If you don’t know anything about Ken Robinson, here’s a short video from Ted.com. Personally, I think everyone should watch it but especially if you’re a parent or involved in education.

Pro Tools applications and help tools

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In this post I’ve listed all the standalone applications I could think of that in some way aids Pro Tools or Pro Tools users. Some of them do very simple and specific things, tools that are just handy to keep around, others are large multi-purpose applications intended for the big production studios.

Note: Some of these are old, very old, and not intended for use with later versions of Pro Tools. I listed them anyway because, well, not everyone is using a later version of Pro Tools. [read]

Check out Lynda.com for Pro Tools video training.

Top 20 Pro Tools Keyboard Short-Cuts

Top futurist, Ray Kurzweil, predicts how technology will change humanity by 2020

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As we approach the end of the first decade of the new millennium, let’s consider what life will be like a decade hence. Changes in our lives from technology are moving faster and faster. The telephone took 50 years to reach a quarter of the U.S. population. Search engines, social networks and blogs have done that in just a few years time. Consider that Facebook started as a way for Harvard students to meet each other just six years ago; it now has 350 million users and counting.

Between now and 2020, the trend will continue, spreading cutting-edge technologies to every corner of the country and beginning to make innovations once consigned to the realm of science fiction real for millions of Americans. Specifically what can we expect? Solar power on steroids, longer lives, the chance to get rid of obesity once and for all, and portable computing devices that start becoming part of your body rather than being held in your hand.

Celemony Software Melodyne Editor [review]

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Melodyne by Celemony

There may be some of you already familiar with Melodyne. For the uninitiated, it’s a piece of software capable of extremely high quality pitch and time manipulation, fantastic for seamlessly tuning vocals or speeding up a track while retaining pitch.

Until now it’s only been possible to edit a file globally. However, first shown in Frankfurt this year, Celemony’s Direct Note Access (DNA) seemed to do the impossible in allowing you to delve into polyphonic audio and change the pitch and time of individual notes.

A full working version has been a long time coming, but the all-new Melodyne Editor is about to go into production. What we have on review here isn’t actually the final version, but a second generation Beta, so there are still a few problems to be sorted.

“Melodyne Editor is a revolution… it could force us to re-evaluate the way we record entirely.”

However, this product is so revolutionary we felt that it was worth getting the heads up on it. Authorisation will be either by computer registration or iLok USB key and you’ll be able to use it on Macs and PCs as either a standalone or plug-in. As a plug-in, you have the advantage of hearing any changes you make with the track.

In use

When you open up Melodyne Editor, you’ll need to transfer the audio that you want to edit to the plug-in for analysis. This can be part or all of the audio and playback will switch to the original if you only transferred parts. This process has to be done in real time and, once completed, Melodyne Editor puts all the notes it thinks are used onto a pitch and time grid as ‘blobs’ with each blob representing a note. [read]

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