Acts of Volition

Comments

Comments are locked. No additional comments may be posted.

Geof -

I guess the only question I have that went un-asked is, "Do you want some new music thrown at you?"

Steven Garrity -

Geof - I'm always glad to hear a good music recommendation. However, much of the music I play on Acts of Volition Radio is music that either has some personal meaning for me, or just really resonated with them when I heard it. While that may be true of some music that gets recommended, don't be surprised if you don't hear your suggestions on the show.

Thanks.

Adalbert -

Hi,

the legal side is not just about paying a fee, but also requires permission from the copyright owner.

Adalbert

Steven Garrity -

Adalbert, that's not always the case. For example, a radio station doesn't have to get permission from an artist to play their music - they just have to pay the appropriate royalties to the artist-organization (ASCAP or SOCAN).

Alan -

Steve, your position got a whole lot stronger since last week with the ruling in <i>CCH</i> v. <i>LSUC</i> and its fleshing out of the fair dealing right under Canadian law as an exception to copyright infringement. If you are "reviewing" music on your radio show, you are not subject fees payable to SOCAN (the representative of copyright holders to whom they forward your fees payable) as "review" in a fair dealing context is permitted under Canadian law and should be celebrated as a unique freedom. As you have set your standard in broadcasting to be the playing and explaining how whole pieces of music are important to you, you are certainly appearing to assert the right to review. Have you complied with the exception rules? I dunno...but that would place me in line with most lawyers.

sil -

Over at LugRadio Global HQ, we've basically concluded that we're only going to play music available under some kind of free licence. We're not really a music show anyway -- much more about talking, and possibly about abusing people -- so it's not a serious burden for us. I can imagine that there are RIAA (or local equivalent) problems for music-oriented shows, though.

Nick Chapman -

Have you considered VBR encoding?

Tony -

Something you might consider using as a solution to the trade-off of having a readily playable file format and the individual track files, is Album Wrapping. As far as I know (I haven't used it in a while) there isn't a standard yet, but it seems to me like is ought to be. Basically, you "wrap" your various mp3 files into one mp3. The resulting mp3 retains the individual track mark points and ID tags internally, but is then playable as one big mp3. This is transparent to the user, unless they choose to extract the tracks by using an un-wrapping tool. Here are some starting points:
<ul>
<li>Mp3Wrap Project</li>
<li>AlbumWrap - a GUI of the above.</li>
<li>Mp3spilt Project</li>
<li>Alba Extractor - A GUI version of the above which found works well.</li>
</ul>