Here is a little rant I wrote on my blog I wanted to share.
I seriously should have known better than to even try to go back to MySpace.
/me logs back into Twitter.
Mixtape tracks have become the staple of any good promotion campaign for Hip-Hop artists since 50 Cent popularized them with his G-Unit mixtapes. Since then everyone from 50, to Eminem, to Jay-Z, to Lil Wayne, to Drake have used "Industry beats," meaning instrumentals from commercially released songs, to record new songs over. I'll even go out on a limb and say that if it wasn't for this practice, 50 Cent would have never been discovered and signed nor would current artists like Drake. In fact, Drake has a remix of Santigold's "Unstoppable" up on his official MySpace right now doing exactly what I just described.
One of the other great self promotion avenues used to be MySpace.com. Every artist has a MySpace including myself and mixtape tracks used to go hand in hand with MySpace. I however began to neglect it in light of Twitter and Facebook, but recently decided to go back to it and post some new music and reestablish my connection with my fans on there.
Unfortunately, I found that every mixtape track that I tried to upload was rejected due to copyright infringement. I was unable to upload my song, with my own lyrics and vocals, over Jay-Z's "Run This Town" instrumental. I was unable to upload my version of Drake's "Forever" either, even though Drake has his version of a Santigold song on his profile right now. Ironic. Now, I know this isn't Drake's fault at all, it's purely MySpace's, and I seriously doubt he would have a problem with artists using instrumentals he used, why would he? He does it. We all do it. This is Hip-Hop. But apparently it seems that if you are not on a major label, MySpace wont let you do it.
What is worse is that mixtape tracks, remixes and Hip-Hop musicians are undoubtably what made MySpace rise to the top of online music social networking in the past simply because Hip-Hop was the first musical community to really embrace social networking. And no other type of artists turn over the large volume of recordings aimed directly at the Internet as rappers do.
MySpace offers musicians a chance to dispute the claim in case they've made a "mistake." I tried to explain everything I have written here to them and file a dispute, but unfortunately every time I clicked submit I got the typical MySpace "Sorry! an unexpected error has occurred. This error has been forwarded to MySpace's technical group" error.
Now, I am working on my own album with some great producers so this doesn't really stop my career, but what about the rapper who cant afford beats but wants to do what his idol 50 Cent did and use industry beats to get discovered by labels and producers? Well tough luck kid, because according to MySpace, you can't, but those that have already made it, can.
Whether this is MySpace's own doing, or whether they got pressured by labels into doing it, I don't know, either way it is hypocritical seeing as the biggest artists on those labels are all doing it without any problems on MySpace; so why can't the rest of us?
So unfortunately instead of using MySpace for what it prides itself on being about, music, I’ve had to go the round about way and upload the song to Usershare instead: Download rukas forever feat drake mp3
Now I'll just go spread it around on Twitter and Facebook like everyone else seems to be doing nowadays anyway.
Thanks a lot MySpace.
One of the other great self promotion avenues used to be MySpace.com. Every artist has a MySpace including myself and mixtape tracks used to go hand in hand with MySpace. I however began to neglect it in light of Twitter and Facebook, but recently decided to go back to it and post some new music and reestablish my connection with my fans on there.
Unfortunately, I found that every mixtape track that I tried to upload was rejected due to copyright infringement. I was unable to upload my song, with my own lyrics and vocals, over Jay-Z's "Run This Town" instrumental. I was unable to upload my version of Drake's "Forever" either, even though Drake has his version of a Santigold song on his profile right now. Ironic. Now, I know this isn't Drake's fault at all, it's purely MySpace's, and I seriously doubt he would have a problem with artists using instrumentals he used, why would he? He does it. We all do it. This is Hip-Hop. But apparently it seems that if you are not on a major label, MySpace wont let you do it.
What is worse is that mixtape tracks, remixes and Hip-Hop musicians are undoubtably what made MySpace rise to the top of online music social networking in the past simply because Hip-Hop was the first musical community to really embrace social networking. And no other type of artists turn over the large volume of recordings aimed directly at the Internet as rappers do.
MySpace offers musicians a chance to dispute the claim in case they've made a "mistake." I tried to explain everything I have written here to them and file a dispute, but unfortunately every time I clicked submit I got the typical MySpace "Sorry! an unexpected error has occurred. This error has been forwarded to MySpace's technical group" error.
Now, I am working on my own album with some great producers so this doesn't really stop my career, but what about the rapper who cant afford beats but wants to do what his idol 50 Cent did and use industry beats to get discovered by labels and producers? Well tough luck kid, because according to MySpace, you can't, but those that have already made it, can.
Whether this is MySpace's own doing, or whether they got pressured by labels into doing it, I don't know, either way it is hypocritical seeing as the biggest artists on those labels are all doing it without any problems on MySpace; so why can't the rest of us?
So unfortunately instead of using MySpace for what it prides itself on being about, music, I’ve had to go the round about way and upload the song to Usershare instead: Download rukas forever feat drake mp3
Now I'll just go spread it around on Twitter and Facebook like everyone else seems to be doing nowadays anyway.
Thanks a lot MySpace.
/me logs back into Twitter.