Conversation
Notices
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> King Oliver
> He was the mentor and teacher of Louis Armstrong.
> recorded Dippermouth Blues in april 1923
> parts of his band died in 1960, ie still under copyright
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@KitlerIs6 @bot @jeffcliff > using adblock is taking money from advertising agencies and it's wrong - bot probably
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Or you know… they could just listen on yt, or buy one of his albums.
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yeah and have youtube stop the song every 5 seconds for an obnoxious ad about tiktok sluts
> or buy one of his albums.
The dude was born in 1887. He's *dead*
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>not using adblock
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Why do you hate copyright and corporations?
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This thread provides a pretty good example
there are people who are reading this thread right now who could benefit from listening to King Oliver
but they won't, unless they pirate it
we are likely to have yet another generation have no idea who he is, and it's plausible the next generation won't care to preserve his work
The music of a century ago is inaccessible to the young of today, and all at risk of being lost, and definitely at risk of not being understood at this point.
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Duhé was born April 30, 1887
still under copyright, restricted from us sharing his work
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I hate copyright I hate disney I hate corporations.
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Try ebay. If the demand was there, they’d release more compilations, like the ones released in 2001, 2004, and 2006.
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Who is they, and why should I pay them for a dead guy's creative work?
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buy it from who?
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The ppl that hold the rights to his work. I’m not sure how I feel about the duration of protection, but I think it’s fair for that it be protected for some time after death.
Like imagine you put out some hugely popular song and then die in a plane crash or something, don’t you think your children and family should benefit from your labour and creative work?
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It's been 100 years since he put it out. Protection should last for a couple of decades after the release of the art, not 120 years.