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Prog Against Pirates



Last Updated: 7/11/2008

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Gender: Female
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 39
Sign: Scorpio

Country: UK
Signup Date: 5/3/2007

Who Gives Kudos:


Sunday, January 13, 2008 

Hi all,

and welcome to all the new folks who have added their names in the last two days!

 

Please checkout our new weblog

It's FAB!

 

Thanks to Shawn and Hansi!

Rx

P-A-P

*Rob*

 
Hello listener...downloader...pirate...pseudo-criminal...

If you can read this, then you've more than likely downloaded this album from a peer to peer network or torrent.

You probably expect the rest of this message to tell you that you're hurting musicians and breaking just about every copyright law in the book. Well, it won't tell you that.

What I would like to tell you is that my record label understands that a large portion of people pirate music because it is easier than buying it. CDs scratch easily, most pay-per-download sites have poor quality and shitty DRM protection, and vinyl is near impossible to find or ship without hassle.
In many cases I wonder why people buy CDs at all anymore. A few like the tangible artwork, some haven't adapted to MP3s yet, but most do it because they have a profound love for music and want to support the artists making it. Kind of restores your faith in humanity for a moment eh?

So, now what?
Like the album? About to go "support the artist" on iTunes?
Well, don't.
Alphabasic is currently in a legal battle against Apple because NONE of our material (Sublight Records included) receives a dime of royalty from the vast amount of sales iTunes has generated using our material.

Want to buy a CD just to show your support?
If you don't particularly like CDs, don't bother.
Retailers like Best Buy and Amazon spike the price so high that their cut is often 8 times higher than the artist's. Besides, most CDs are made out of unrecyclable plastic and leave a nasty footprint in your environment.

If you do particularly like CDs, buy them from the label (in our case, alphabasic.com). After manufacturing costs are recuperated, our artists usually receive over 90% of the actual money coming out of your wallet.
In addition, all of our physical products are made out of 100% recycled material.

Want to show your support?
Go here and browse our library of lossless, DRM-free downloads.
Already have that?
Then feel free to donate whatever you want to your favorite artist. 100% will go directly to them.
Hell, you can even donate a penny just to thank the artist.

If you really like 'The Flashbulb - Soundtrack To A Vacant Life' and want to show your support without it going to greedy retailers, distributors, and coked-up label reps, then click the button below.
If you send us your mailing address, Alphabasic may occasionally send you various goodies (overstocks, stickers, even rare CDs) in appreciation and encouragement for your support.
Thanks for reading.
Who knows if my little business plan here will work to fund new releases, but even failure is better than the crappy label/distributor/retailer system musicians have suffered from for over 50 years.
We hope you enjoy the music as much as we do releasing it.
Finally, if you plan on sharing this release, please include this file. The only reason it is here is to show the listener where he can support his favorite artists!

Benn Jordan
CEO - Alphabasic Records


A appreciate what your trying to do here...ive downloaded music in my time, and i realise how it affects the indusrty, but, when you read somethingf like what i just posted, you realise the difference between the indusrty and the actual artist.
Support the Artist, not the Industry!
 
Posted by *Rob* on Saturday, February 02, 2008 - 12:06 AM
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Prog Against Pirates

 
If the artist is asking you NOT TO DOWNLOAD then to support the artist you should not download.
If an artist choses to give his music away, that's cool, but there are an awful lot of artists here who are asking for their stuff not to be illeagally downloaded and that too should be respected.
Big name massive labels have tradditionally scooped off the cream and in some cases treated artists and public pretty poorly. The absoloute majority of the artists here are either on small indy labels or self release. These artists are not being 'abused' by the majors and to steal from these artists will put them out of the game......... so we will be left with no indies to give the majors a run for their money!
 
Posted by Prog Against Pirates on Saturday, February 02, 2008 - 9:40 AM
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