I don't know what Glee is, but Damon's view is not uncommon. Many artists won't license their songs to TV shows, advertising, etc, because it's considered a cheapening of the brand, and any unauthorised use is swiftly followed by lawsuits in a lot of cases. The thinking behind it is that once you license something, you lose control over how that thing is presented, what sort of context it appears in, what sort of message it could be used to send etc... retaining these things means that you retain control over the contexts in which your work appears and that's a very important thing - fans of a group attach themselves to the contexts of music (image, marketing, presentation) as much as they do to the music itself. All these things constitute the "brand", and it pays dividends to keep your branding consistent, especially with such a heavily image-oriented group as Gorillaz where a great deal of work has gone into extraneous elements.Nouw said:I found this video a while ago and whole-heartedly agreed with it. Not just the Glee-aspect, the bigger picture. You might have seen me post this around here too.
So do you agree? And what's your point of view?
He specifically has issue with Glee though. One of the things that I was reminded of while watching the video was a commercial I saw ages ago with 19-2000 (The Soulchild Remix). I did a quick Google search and found a list of Gorillaz licensing in movies, TV, ads, etc:BonsaiK said:I don't know what Glee is, but Damon's view is not uncommon. Many artists won't license their songs to TV shows, advertising, etc, because it's considered a cheapening of the brand, and any unauthorised use is swiftly followed by lawsuits in a lot of cases. The thinking behind it is that once you license something, you lose control over how that thing is presented, what sort of context it appears in, what sort of message it could be used to send etc... retaining these things means that you retain control over the contexts in which your work appears and that's a very important thing - fans of a group attach themselves to the contexts of music (image, marketing, presentation) as much as they do to the music itself. All these things constitute the "brand", and it pays dividends to keep your branding consistent, especially with such a heavily image-oriented group as Gorillaz where a great deal of work has gone into extraneous elements.
Well, because I don't really know what Glee is, I can't really comment except to say that I guess Glee crosses a line somewhere for him that the other stuff doesn't - at least in his eyes.Dags90 said:He specifically has issue with Glee though. One of the things that I was reminded of while watching the video was a commercial I saw ages ago with 19-2000 (The Soulchild Remix). I did a quick Google search and found a list of Gorillaz licensing in movies, TV, ads, etc:BonsaiK said:I don't know what Glee is, but Damon's view is not uncommon. Many artists won't license their songs to TV shows, advertising, etc, because it's considered a cheapening of the brand, and any unauthorised use is swiftly followed by lawsuits in a lot of cases. The thinking behind it is that once you license something, you lose control over how that thing is presented, what sort of context it appears in, what sort of message it could be used to send etc... retaining these things means that you retain control over the contexts in which your work appears and that's a very important thing - fans of a group attach themselves to the contexts of music (image, marketing, presentation) as much as they do to the music itself. All these things constitute the "brand", and it pays dividends to keep your branding consistent, especially with such a heavily image-oriented group as Gorillaz where a great deal of work has gone into extraneous elements.
http://www.vblurpage.com/info/tv_gorillaz.htm
That's good to see. And the usual 'BonsaiK' reply.BonsaiK said:I don't know what Glee is, but Damon's view is not uncommon. Many artists won't license their songs to TV shows, advertising, etc, because it's considered a cheapening of the brand, and any unauthorised use is swiftly followed by lawsuits in a lot of cases. The thinking behind it is that once you license something, you lose control over how that thing is presented, what sort of context it appears in, what sort of message it could be used to send etc... retaining these things means that you retain control over the contexts in which your work appears and that's a very important thing - fans of a group attach themselves to the contexts of music (image, marketing, presentation) as much as they do to the music itself. All these things constitute the "brand", and it pays dividends to keep your branding consistent, especially with such a heavily image-oriented group as Gorillaz where a great deal of work has gone into extraneous elements.Nouw said:I found this video a while ago and whole-heartedly agreed with it. Not just the Glee-aspect, the bigger picture. You might have seen me post this around here too.
So do you agree? And what's your point of view?
If they do it is still the actual song, not some silly musical rehash of it.Zachary Amaranth said:Don't the Gorillaz have songs on both Guitar Hero and Rock Band?
I own games from both franchises, but his criticism of Glee seems to go right down the same vein.
There's a difference between making money because enough people like your music and bother to pay for it and making music in order to make money. The second you go down that road it stops being about a personal creative outlet and more "will this song sell?"Sober Thal said:Sing your own music Glee.
Write your own stuff Puff Daddy, and everyone else who 'samples' others songs. Sample a sound here or there, but not whole songs you lazy *#@$s!!!
As far as having your song in a video game, is selling out? NEWS FLASH! People aren't musicians just so they can write music, they want to make money and live, just like most sane people want to make money and live. I disagree with piggybacking off of others.
TV shows tend to take a lot of liberties when putting music on air. They remix it, edit it in various ways, etc. In Rockband, you still have the song in its entirety the way it was meant to be played and heard (also, can't people make their own songs anyway?). Besides, I wouldn't want my art to be associated with Glee regardless.Zachary Amaranth said:Don't the Gorillaz have songs on both Guitar Hero and Rock Band?
I own games from both franchises, but his criticism of Glee seems to go right down the same vein.
But, if there is a band that has over done remixes* its gorillaz.crudus said:TV shows tend to take a lot of liberties when putting music on air. They remix it, edit it in various ways, etc. In Rockband, you still have the song in its entirety the way it was meant to be played and heard (also, can't people make their own songs anyway?). Besides, I wouldn't want my art to be associated with Glee regardless.Zachary Amaranth said:Don't the Gorillaz have songs on both Guitar Hero and Rock Band?
I own games from both franchises, but his criticism of Glee seems to go right down the same vein.