BREAKING NEWS!! Stolen Beatles Tapes Finally Recovered!
British and Dutch police, in collaboration with International Federation of
the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) investigators have recovered tapes of the
historic Beatles "Get Back" recording sessions.
The tapes were recorded in 1969 during the making of the album "Let it Be".
They were reported missing shortly after the sessions, and since then have
only been available as pirate copies that have long been widely available
throughout Europe and the U.S.
Investigations by IFPI and British Phonographic Industry (BPI) resulted in a
series of raids in Holland and England by City of London Police and their
Dutch counterparts FIOD-ECD. The investigations had started after BPI
uncovered pirate copies of the rare recordings in previous anti-piracy
operations in the UK.
Five hundred original reel-to-reel tapes belonging to the Beatles were seized,
and six suspects have been arrested for theft and handling stolen goods.
According to Jay Berman, Chairman and CEO of IFPI: "We applaud this exemplary
police operation, which reflects the extraordinary level of international
coordination that is needed to tackle the sophisticated cross-border
strategies of today's organized music pirates."
Read the press release: http://www.grayzone.com/ifpi011003.htm
Phish Make Sound (board) Decision: Sell Legal Bootlegs
Phish is offering soundboard recordings of their sold-out New Year's Eve
reunion show in New York and their three January Hampton, Virginia, dates
through www.livephish.com for fans to purchase and burn onto CD within
forty-eight hours of the show. The band is also planning to offer future and
archival shows. "The taping experience is part of our community," says band
manager John Paluska. "We're trying to provide a simple way for people to get
this music."
Rollingstone.com, December 23, 2002
Rapper Nas Pushes Album Release, Citing Piracy
Rapper Nas' recent album "God's Son" had to be released four days early
because numerous counterfeit copies flooded the streets in mid-December.
"It's important to me that the fans hear my album the way I intended. When
you buy a bootleg or pirate a download off the net, you don't get the real
thing. The sequencing is wrong, you're probably missing some tracks, and you
don't even get the artwork and CD bonuses," said Nas in a statement.
Visit Nas' official website: http://www.iamnas.com/home.html
New York Times, December 4, 2002 (Reuters)
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/arts/entertainment-media-nas.html
Rapper Nas Pushes Album Release, Citing Piracy
New York Times, December 4, 2002 (Reuters)
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/arts/entertainment-media-nas.html
Dylan Releases More Boots
The sixth volume of Bob Dylan's "The Bootleg Series" is scheduled for this
year. The album will be culled from an October 31, 1964, Dylan performance at
Philharmonic Hall in New York City. "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall," "The Times
They Are A-Changin'," and songs from "Bringing It All Back Home," were
performed at the show, a favorite among Dylan fans.
Information is available at Dylan's official website: http://bobdylan.com/updates/.
(See also GrayZone Digest, 4th Quarter, 2002: http://www.grayzone.com/1002.htm "Bob Dylan Beats the Boots Once Again")
Rollingstone.com, November 13, 2002
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