Friday, April 2, 2010

Numero Group: Eccentric Breaks & Beats

Cool Article from The Chicago Reader Blog on Numero Group's upcoming Eccentric Breaks and Beats cd:

The Numero Group Turns the Tables on a Bootlegger
Posted by Miles Raymer on Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 5:43 PM

I recently read an interesting book called Bootleg: The Secret History of the Other Recording Industry. It was written in 1993, when upgrading to CDs was the latest technological advancement in the gray-to-black-market music business. (Coincidentally, 1993 was also the year the first popular graphical Web browser was released, accelerating the mass adoption of the Internet—one of the only enemies bootleggers and legit labels would ever share.) But the bulk of the book's action is set in the 1970s, the golden age of bootlegging. At that time bootleggers actually drove innovation in the straight record business for a while. They created and sustained the massive popularity of live albums in the 70s, and legit labels tried and often failed to match the speed, quality, and popularity of the best bootleg releases. Bootleggers basically invented the B-sides and rarities compilation—along with its even more profitable bigger brother, the rarities box set—and the straight biz later adopted both formats.
A bootleg that became seriously popular would often be bootlegged in turn by another underground label. If it became seriously, seriously popular it would be bootlegged by a legit label. This is how Dylan's Basement Tapes and the entirety of his incredible Bootleg Series on Columbia happened. It's also how the Numero Group's upcoming Eccentric Breaks and Beats came to be.

This morning the label posted a blog entry announcing that they're pulling a Basement Tapes on a 40-minute mix of Numero-sourced samples and breaks first released anonymously as a 12-inch.

With our cease and desist letter ready to be dropped in the mail, an interesting thing happened: We kinda got hooked on the flawlessly arranged pastiche. Taking cue from the Bob Dylan Bootleg series, we turned the tables on the pirate. Seizing the plates from the pressing plant, we repurposed this underground release (preserving the contraband "Numbero" label) as the ultimate showcase for our seven years in business.
It's difficult enough for labels to get people to pay for legitimate releases, whose profits help sustain the artists who make the music. For bootleggers—whose material is often of unknown provenance and dicier audio quality—the sales situation is almost totally hopeless. The fact that someone went to the trouble and expense of pressing up vinyl on the sly—as opposed to, say, just sampling Numero's material sans license, which the label says Madlib and Mayer Hawthorne have done—is kind of a huge compliment. It's nice to see the Numero folks taking it as such.


*Ghostcapital says: Nice work, Numero. This just proves that your label is just as smart as you've always seemed.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...
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Dam-G said...

Can you please re-up this link?

nicholab said...

didn't post one.

Anonymous said...

http://turbobit.net/6psw05d6a2ic.html

Anonymous said...

It ought to be noted that as stonesthrow/madlib release their medicine show comps eg Flight to Brazil etc, nowhere on the cds, NOWHERE, are any of the artists whose music are being comped listed. Forget royalties, what about just simple recognition? Yeah, people can argue about the ethics of putting up records for others to freely check out, but I can think of no one that would just throw a comp of other people's music up on their blog and not give give the composers of that music props let alone selling their music for profit

[sorry for the rant]

Anyway, speaking of recognition, thanks so much for running this blog and sharing all this wonderful music!!!, giving the artists a wider audience.

cleme