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Posts Tagged ‘Warner Music’

Oprah Helped Lady Gaga Battle Stage Fright Before MET Costume Institute Gala Performance

It’s O To The Rescue! Lady Gaga had to be dragged out of her dressing room by Oprah Winfrey after suffering from stage fright at the annual Costume Institute Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on Monday night.The “Poker Face” star was handpicked by Vogue editor Anna Wintour – who throws the “Oscars of [...]

April 28, 2003: Apple Opens iTunes Store

2003: Apple opens the iTunes Music Store and starts to revolutionize the music-recording industry, one song at a time.
Between the mid-1980s and late 1990s, the media were undergoing a massive conversion from analog to digital. The music industry hated it.
Much to the chagrin of the Recording Industry Association of America, internet users quickly caught on [...]

Phil Lesh, HeadCount Rock the Earth Auctions

WIN BRUNCH WITH PHIL LESH, MEET WARREN HAYNES AND OTHERS, ALL FOR CHARITY

Phil Lesh

The good people at Charity Folks have teamed up with Phil Lesh‘s Unbroken Chain Foundation, HeadCount, and Rock the Earth for some excellent holiday charity auctions.

The Unbroken Chain Foundation is offering the chance for 30 fans to have brunch with Phil on January 1, 2010. They will each receive a poster, which will be personalized that day. For more information, and to bid, please go here.

Additionally, The Dead are very happy to announce that their Spring 2009 Charity Auction raised over $450,000 for various Dead related charities.

Headcount’s holiday auctions feature:
- Opportunity to meet Warren Haynes with 5th Row Seats to Gov’t Mule
- Chance to win a signed Dave Matthews Band guitar (rare to get the whole band to sign)
- Opportunity to meet Entourage’s Adrian Grenier & Honey Brothers at Brooklyn Bowl
More information here.

Rock the Earth’s holiday auctions feature power lunches with:
- Brooklyn Bowl’s & Relix’s Pete Shapiro
- Bonnaroo Co-Founder Richard Goodstone
- President of Warner Music Nashville, John Esposito
- Radio DJ’s Matt Pinfield and Leslie Fram
- Google Chef Charlie Ayers

More information here.


Apple Launches iTunes Store in Mexico

Apple® today announced the launch of the iTunes® Store in Mexico (www.itunes.com/mexico) with an incredible selection of Mexican and international music from all the major labels and hundreds of independent labels. Launching with a catalog of millions of songs, the iTunes Store in Mexico features Mexican artists including Paulina Rubio, Vicente Fernández and Zoé and [...]

US file-sharer refuses donations

Hand putting CD into computer

A US student who faces millions of dollars in fines for illegally swapping music files has admitted that he shared and downloaded hundreds of songs.

Joel Tenenbaum is accused of copyright infringement by four recording labels for sharing tracks by artists such as Nirvana and Green Day.

It is only the second music-downloading case to go to trial in the US.

In the first, single mother Jammie Thomas Rassett of Minnesota was ordered to pay $1.92m for sharing 24 songs.

Mr Tenenbaum is accused of using a computer at his parents’ home and at his college to download and distribute digital files.

Prosecutors working on behalf of the record labels have focused on 30 shared songs.

Under US law, the recording companies are entitled to $750 to $30,000 per infringement. However, the jury can raise the amount to $150,000 per track if it finds the infringements were wilful.

In the Minnesota case, the jury awarded $80,000 per song.

In opening remarks on Tuesday Tenenbaum’s lawyer said he "was a kid who did what kids do and loved technology and loved music".

Recording companies had been slow to adapt to the internet, he added.

But prosecutors argued that file-sharers take a significant toll on the revenues for artists and others involved in music

The recording industry has recently changed its tactics in file sharing cases, preferring to settle quickly for much smaller amounts.

However, cases such as those against Mr Tenenbaum, which were already filed, are proceeding to trial.

The four recording labels involved in the case are subsidiaries of Universal Music, Warner Music and Sony.

The case continues at the US District Court in Boston. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.