Sorry to chime in so late. Have to say I'm feeling Matt. The one thing I
would add is that even though I think it's a tad irresponsible to release
records like these in limited numbers when we all know what the Ebay/GEMM
markets are like, that still does not compell me to side with the
bootleggers, because that's a preference and a pragmatic footnote to what is
ultimately a moral (or artistic) issue - and if you don't buy that, it seems
to me it's at least a good enough reason to want to kick someone's ass,
whereas the idea of someone wanting to kick KDJ's ass for putting out too
few records is absurd.

Tristan
=======
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Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

----- Original Message -----
From: "Matthew MacQueen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "::)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2003 9:22 PM
Subject: (313) artists vs. bootlegging


> > the bootleggers would have a lot less market if the record were
repressed
>
> I can't disagree with that logic.  BUT... I've been following this thread
for awhile and a voice I'm not hearing in this debate (that is kind of
troubling to me, actually) is the rights of the ARTIST.  Art is not
necessarily subject to the same demands as say, any old consumer product
where the goal is to sell as many as possible (say, toothpaste or
something).  One of the benefits of owning and running your own label (or
printshop, for example) is to control the trickle - or flood - of your art
into an art-buyers market -- more control over your own destiny.  You can
still keep things limited or special if, as the artist, you feel like that
is a part of your 'statement' so to speak, of what you have created.
>
> When a famous potter makes a vase, and they decide to make 5 of them, not
500... it makes that vase unique.  You have to think the artist has a reason
to only make 5 if that's what they choose.
>
> Is everyone forgetting that the artist has a right to release as many or
as few pieces of art as they feel?   Sure there are ramifications of
releasing few, I'm not denying that:  if demand is high enough and the art
is scarce, it may get bootlegged.  That is a risk.
>
> But an artist of any medium is certainly never OBLIGED to fill the needs
of every consumer!  That is the artists right.  I have detected this slight
tone of "well if he just would have pressed up more it wouldn't matter, he
deserved it, etc." -- but the reality is sometimes an artist might want LESS
of something out there, not more, as part of the artistic statement itself.
I respect artists who choose to release less, not more... even if I can't
have a copy myself.  But that doesn't necessarily mean I'm going to bootleg
it (and profit from it) if I can't find my copy.
>
> peace,
> Matt
>
>


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