T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2409.1 | didn't appear to be trend setting | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Wed Aug 08 1990 09:22 | 10 |
|
The workstation was one of our Tandy buyouts, so I'm sure this was all
MIDI via MPU or other standard PC interface. I didn't see any Sun
stations, but there was a Mac. The guy had a video that was probably
SMPTE'd to the sequencer that played at the end of the show. He had
a D-50 and several rack SGU's. I was working the show so I didn't have
time to see any demos, just the show at the end.
CdH
|
2409.2 | | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Wed Aug 08 1990 09:35 | 21 |
| I saw part of the demo. It seemed to be aimed at giving a view of
NAS. I may be wrong in some of this, but I saw a MAC with Performer
and a PC with a sequencer I didn't know, all MIDId to a couple of
keyboards and some rack mount gear (I saw a couple of U-220s).
One guy played a bass line into Performer. The sequence was saved
as a MIDIfile and sent to the PC via LANworks (or is it lanWORKS...no
rat-holes please). A melody line was then added by a second guy
on another kbd into the PC sequencer. Itwent on this way until they
built up the piece.
All in all it seemed to impresss people (there was always a good
crowd ooing and aawing). I think though that the creativity and
the novelty of the demo is what got people's interest as most of
them would not have understood MIDI and probably thought that NAS
supported the music end of things.
10 out of 10 though to the demonstrators for their unique approach.
Ken
|
2409.3 | Pretty good ... | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Wed Aug 08 1990 09:47 | 29 |
|
The demo was basically meant to show DEC's ability to integrate PC's
and Macs, using a VAX as a file server. They had Cakewalk and another
sequencer (forget which one) running on the Mac and the DEC PC. Both
were using a common area on the VAXstation disk. They'd start a song on
the Mac (taking requests from the audience to prove they were doing it
live, I saw them do 'Stairway to Heaven') and then bounce over to the
PC and add a bass track, then back to the Mac for a flute solo. All
transparent to the user. I guess both sequencers must use MIDI standard
files, allowing them to add tracks from either place.
My group did a similar thing at a show a few months back, bouncing a
spread sheet between a PC, a MAC, a VAX and a UNIX/RISC box. But the
music demo was defintely more entertaining.
Probably no big deal to most of the folks in this notes file, but the
audience seemed to enjoy it. They did have a very nice rack full of
Roland U-220s and D-50 type synths. The other cute thing they did was
a pre-recorded sequence, with 3 or 4 different PCs synced to one
master. Next to each CPU they had an individual speaker, and when it
came time for that PC to do it's "solo", they would introduce it, like
"on flute, the DECstation from Boston". And the sound for that solo
would come from the individual speaker next to the PC. Silly, but fun.
Rob
|
2409.4 | pretty neat and impressive | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Wed Aug 08 1990 10:09 | 13 |
| I talked to the guy who did the show. (I didn't see it but I was right
next to it fixing a probem at the Rdb PC/Mac demo) From what I remember,
they had some canned music as well as some live recording. The canned music
was composed by a dec person (the guy I talked to, whose name I've forgotten)
and synced through SMPTE to a laser disc showing a video. A Mac picked up
the SMPTE from the disk and then sent MTC (I think) to the other PCs for timing.
The score was spread out amonsgt several different PCs and Macs. The VAX was
the "conducter" of the whole thing, in that it was the file server where
all the score files were stored. It was definitely a LanWORKS (I checked
a Mac LanWORKS manual for spelling) / NAS demo. Supposedly it is supposed
to be more interesting than a spreadsheet moving around between machines.
Chad
|
2409.5 | 'bout time... I fess up... | RANGER::ROBERT | | Wed Aug 08 1990 18:57 | 119 |
|
Well I was wondering if anyone was ever going to get around to
submitting a note on the Network Music Demo. I'm suprised it took this
long seeing that it was at a large DEC show in the Boston area where
most of you MIDIots contributing to this file reside...
Allow me to introduce myself, I'm one of the "guys". (Nice to see my
name was so well remembered!) -- Tom Robert from the PC Tech Support
group in Littleton to be exact. The other "guy" was Jack Hart,
group/project manager of the DECstation (PC, not RISC Workstation, we
gotta do something about our naming conventions!) also from Littleton.
We also had fellow COMMUSICer Derek Speed as well as a couple other
DECies substitute in once in a while.
I mentioned the demo a couple months back buried inside a note
pertaining to another topic and I've mentioned it to a couple
COMMUSICers in the past, but under advise from a fellow employee I did
not create a topic on it in this notes file... but since the cat's out
of the bag now...
The previous replies have got it nailed down pretty good: It is a NAS
demo (although developed and supported from the PC group) a demo very
similiar to what's been done in the past and currently using bussiness
applications such as spreadsheets and word processors -- although we
decided to spice it up a bit by using MIDI and Music instead. Jack
came up with the idea around March and sketched it on a cocktail napkin
at a bar down at the Cape -- now it's reality! It's gotten tremendous
response -- using a universal language, music -- to get across our
marketing messages. People love it and it's going places.
The original demo was done for PC EXPO in NYC back in June on a much
grander scale... the whole stage area in the front of the booth was
designed around the music demo. We had an "Orchrestra Pit" setup where
the PCs and Macs actually sat on chairs and were the members of the DEC
LanWORKS Symphony Orchrestra. Everything was MIDIed up including eight
spotlights which I programmed to go along with the Solos and the
Finale. It was a hugh success -- we packed them in every show,
standing room only, into the aisle and the neighbooring booth! In all
my years of trade shows for DEC I've NEVER seen us have such a popular
demo/booth.
Yes, DEC (our CC) bought ALL of the equipment including a rack unit
containing a Tascam MM-1 Mixer, 2 Roland U-220s, 2 Mark of the Unicorn's
MIDI Time Pieces, a Digitech DSP 256, and a Carver Amp. Also 2 JBL
Speakers, 8 Kawaii KM-20 Powered Monitors, a Roland W-30, a Roland
D-50, 8 PC MIDI interfaces, several packages of Cakewalk, Voyetra,
Performer, and even Finale so we could do scoring on the Mac! Not to
mention the Sunn MIDI controlled light panel, 3 MIDI controlled dimmer
paks and a dozen spotlights! Whew! I think that's everything...
(Can you tell I've been excited to work on this demo?) Everything was
purchased from either E.U. Wurlitzers or Acton Music.
The 3 components of the demos were as follows: First we introduced
certain members of the orchrestra by having them solo on different
instruments that did come from individual speakers located right next
to that particular machine or "Performing Desktop" as we like to call
them. We used the individual outs of the W-30 and virtual MIDI volume
sliders in Performer on the Mac for this.
Next we do the live demonstration where we build up a small multi-track
MIDI recording by bouncing the sequence back and forth between a PC and a
Mac. This is the part that truly shows off our messages of transparent
integration between DOS, OS/2, and Macintosh using DEC LanWORKS. We
made use of standard MIDI files which both applications support. ALL
the files were kept in a common directory on the VAX, yet all were
accessible as if they were on a local hard drive to all the PCs and
Macs. Jack would record some piano using Performer on the Mac, save it
away, then I would instantly bring up the same file using Cakewalk on
my PC. I would play back part of it and then add a bass, flute,
percussion whatever fit. I would save it back. Then Jack would bring
it up once more on the Mac and add a third part. Voila! Universally
understood transparent file sharing between two completely different
desktops. Whether you understood spreadsheets or even English it
didn't matter as long as you weren't deaf! (Can you tell I've been
plaqued by marketing?!)
For the finale we would show a video on the projection screen and sync
one of our pre-recorded MIDI compostions to it via SMPTE. Only
everyone got in on the action. Each PC or Mac (and by the way we had
several 3rd party PCs in this as well which made it that much more
impressive) played a different instrument in the compostion. They all
had their clocks synced to the Master Mac which was decoding the SMPTE.
What impressed me was that Performer took care of the Direct Time Lock
and Song Position Pointer -- we could shuttle the video to any point
and start it playing and within 2 seconds our whole DEC LanWORKS
Orchestra would be synced up and playing the right part of the
sequence perfectly!
Well that's pretty much the Music Demo as it stands today, however
we're continuing developement on it. We're working on integrating
Workstations, Ultrix, Computer Graphics, Databases, and Terminals/Printers
into it. For instance, using Finale on the Mac we can create a PostScript
version of the score and then instantly pull it up on one of our
workstations using a tech publisher package and add images (perhaps the
composer's image using VAX Camera) and/or text to it, and then print it
out on our laser printer and hand it to someone.
For integrating the database I had the idea of storing a bunch of MIDI
sequences with record attributes of the composer/sequence. It would be
like any other database demo but with the magic touch of being able to play
back any of the retreived records! Sort of a Network Juke Box.
I may actually be asking for the help of you MIDIots out there who have
sequences to offer for the database. Wouldn't that be great, a hugh
collection of sequences all composed by DEC employees! I have to wait
to see how things pan out with the demo and legal-wise though before
I'll submit a formal request for something like this though.
Hope this wasn't too long winded but I've been waiting to talk about
this demo in here for quite some time now. I thinks it's a great step
for DEC as far as demos and a new image go. We've gotten great press
on it internally and externally from both Computer and Music sources
including the personal interest of the vice-president of Roland.
Next stop: Dallas, Texas for NetWorld the week of September 8th.
(Any of you Texan DECie MIDIots out there, try to stop by)
-Tom
|
2409.6 | A standard that works | 4GL::DICKSON | | Wed Aug 08 1990 22:39 | 3 |
| Of course, this all works because the music industry has agreed on
a standard file format. Too bad the spreadsheet and wordprocessor
people can't do the same thing. :)
|
2409.7 | This is work??? | JANUS::CWALSH | Paw City | Thu Aug 09 1990 04:40 | 8 |
|
What a job. Your boss buys you all your favourite toys, then pays you to play
with them.
Where do I go to get a job like that?
Chris
|
2409.8 | If you can't PULL it, PUSH it! | RANGER::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 09 1990 10:54 | 29 |
|
I guess you just had to be at the right place at the right time...
Actually I had to switch jobs. I was in Workstations BPM when Jack
called me and asked for my assistance. (Jack used to be in W/S BPM
which is how I know him) At first I had the support of my management
to work on the demo -- but the deal was that it would include
workstations so that it could be used at a flashy workstation show, ie.
SIGGRAPH. This soon fell through due to lack of any MIDI interface for
our workstations.
[Derek Speed was working with someone on the West Coast
on a Multi-Media demo which included an adapted Apple MIDI
interface for the DECstation 5000... then one day the guy up and left,
and that was that. You may recall a note I entered a few months ago
discussing possibilities of a SCSI to MIDI interface, now you know what
that was all about]
Anyways, I was getting a lot of push back from management spending time
on the Music Demo when it didn't include any workstation content, so...
I up and left too! Joined the PC Tech Support Group and here I am.
What's nice though is that I still have the Workstation experience and
it looks like they'll let me add the W/S content from this end.
[Hey, if you can't PULL a file over, log onto the other side and PUSH
it over!]
-TR
|
2409.9 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Thu Aug 09 1990 17:24 | 11 |
| Gaaack! All those goodies ... and being PAID, too! And, you probably
aren't getting in trouble with the wife and kids because of your
"work". Only goes to show that the only way to get really good
equipment is to find a way to have someone else pay for it ...
Best of luck. If you haven't already, you might search through the
COMMUSIC tapes to see if there are any submissions there that could be
ported to your system. (I don't have MIDI files, but I do have QX5
tapes that could be dumped to a QX5 (I am currently "at liberty" as
far as any MIDI equipment goes -- I gots nothing) and diddled with.)
Steve
|
2409.10 | a REAL 'roadshow' for DEC.. wotta gig | SALSA::MOELLER | Me so Hungry | Thu Aug 09 1990 18:29 | 12 |
| I have tons of originals in PERFORMER format.
BTW, Tom, you or Jack Hart are gonna get a request to come to Arizona
in early October (nice here then!) for the AFCEA show (Armed Forces
Communication ___ ____).. I'd be more than happy to work the booth with
anyone that shows up.
I had to explain to the sales rep (you spoke to her at DECworld)
involved that there was a lot more going on than just getting PC's, a
MAC and some software..
karl
|
2409.11 | Back at 'cha | RANGER::ROBERT | | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:19 | 29 |
|
.8: I don't have a wife OR kids, so that's not a problem anyways, but
I'll drink to the rest of what you said. (For that matter, I'll drink
to not having a wife or kids either!)
.9: If we start requesting MIDI sequences, we could accept anything now
in Performer, Cakewalk or Voyetra formats, or any standard MIDI file
for a PC or Mac, or Roland MC500,300,compatible. But I'm sure there's
enough support in this conference/area to get a hold of whatever
sequencer was needed and dump it to Performer. The COMMUSIC tapes is a
great idea too, I've read this conference for over 5 years and have never
participated or even heard the COMMUSIC tapes... this would be a good
time.
.10: Hi Karl. Yes, I remember being approached at DECworld about
that. I told them I knew of you thru this conference, it sounded like
you already had them sold on this stuff even before they even heard of
the music demo! It would be great to get together out there. We'll
have to see how that event pans out with the rest of what we're doing
in October.
The other great thing about the music demo (or not so great depending
on where/when) is that we've had requests for it all over the globe...
Seriously- Singapore, Japan, Austrailia, Europe... maybe we should
design some World Tour Jackets!
-TR
|
2409.12 | Friends, Romans, LAN me your ear ;-) | WARNUT::KAYD | WORM-mode noter | Tue Aug 14 1990 04:50 | 22 |
|
One thing which hasn't yet been mentioned, and which your customers should
be warned about before seeing/hearing this demo, is the high pun level
attained by the presenters :-)
For the demo I saw, suggested songs included Billy Joels 'PianoLAN', Led
Zeppelin's 'Gateway to Heaven' and others which my memory won't let me remember!
Personally I think they should have stuck to old favourites like 'LAN of Hope
and Glory' (always goes down well here in the UK), Abba's 'Gimme Gimme Gimme
a LAN after Midnight' etc :-)
But seriously folks, I was very impressed with this demo, and if a similar
thing ever gets set up in the UK I volunteer to be responsible for buying
all of the equipment.
Cheers,
Derek.
P.S. If you're syncing to video you could always show a bit of 'The LAN That
Time Forgot'. Aaarrrggh I can't stop !!!
|
2409.13 | Yes, we try to be PUNny too... | RANGER::ROBERT | | Tue Aug 14 1990 14:29 | 21 |
|
Please, go on, we could use more suggestions... other's we have done
are This LAN is your LAN, the Candy LAN, Ether Cat (Alley Cat),
and we've thought about Bridge Over Troubled Water and Fifty Ways to
File on your Server. (Get on the Q-Bus Gus, Hop off the Net Chet, Just
Drop in the PC Lee, and set yourself free...)
We've got some lyrics to The Candy LAN as well (backup vocals):
Who can take a Network (Who can take a Network),
Add in some PCs (Add in some PCs)
Sprinkle in a Macintosh or Two,
Digital Can (Digital Can), DEC LanWORKS Can! (DEC LanWORKS Can!)
A brave offer to purchase the equipment, you might just get held to
that! Seriously, PC Integration is a big thing in Europe, I'm sure
there's several places over there that would like to have something
like this.
-TR
|
2409.14 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Tue Aug 14 1990 15:06 | 2 |
| You better not be using copyrighted music for promotional purposes
without paying appropriate fees.
|
2409.15 | Can the files be obtained somewhere? | MUNICH::GENIUS | The Genius from Munich | Tue Aug 14 1990 17:11 | 5 |
| Hmmm... seems everybody out in the US has heard the demo! But what about us
poor people living in Europe? What about submitting at least the demo
sequences to interested people in Europe?
Joerg
|
2409.16 | I'm in Europe and we would love it! | CERN::EJM | Rick N. Backer | Wed Aug 15 1990 08:34 | 9 |
| I work at CERN in Geneva but happened to be working at the RISCserver demo booth
at DECworld, right next to the LAN (MIDI Music) Demo. It was great! I talked
to Tom, I think, as they were setting things up. Anyway, one of my first jobs
here was to work with the MIS people on the PC integration problem. There are
maybe 4000 Macs and 2000 PCs at CERN plus a multitude of SUNs, Apollos, DEC
workstations all needing to communicate etc. I think they would love the DEMO
here!
John
|
2409.17 | Reply to Replies... | RANGER::ROBERT | | Wed Aug 15 1990 18:22 | 45 |
|
.14: The legal aspect of using those tunes never occured to me... but
then again they didn't occur to anyone else either. This demo has been
shown at two large shows now and seen by 1,000s of people including
corporate and legal/shmegal type people and nobody has questioned that
part of it, let alone objected to it.
What's the deal on that though? We're not playing copyrighted recorded
material off of any media source, or even pre-bought/recorded sequences,
and we're certainly not selling the MUSIC in any form... we're just playing
live a few bars of the tune. Cover bands go out and play copyrighted
music all the time for promotional purposes, they're promoting
themselves... should they/do they pay any fees?
.15: The used sequences themselves hardly represent the demo. I really
don't know of how much interest they'd be to anyone. There's Jack's
COPYRIGHTED World Anthem, my version of the disco version of
Beethoven's 5th, and the solo sequence which is just a looped I IV V
riff with a bunch of looped solo instruments within it, and there's
a few others we keep around that Jack did. Jack's World Anthem is very
good, but otherwise we offer nothing extraordinary compared to the
average COMMUSICers sequences.
.16: Yes John, I believe I was the one that talked to you too. Europe
sounds great to me, and CERN definetly sounds like a great setting for the
demo! Escpecially with the addition of Ultrix support, this means that
other UNIX vendors, such as Sun, could "play" along via NFS.
If you, or anyone else for that matter that has a valid and opportune
use of this demo, and would like to have it at a certain event, you
could make a formal request directly to me for it now. I'll handle
it or find the right person to divert it to.
Part of the original scope and implementation plan of this demo was to
make it scalable so that could be set up to different degrees at different
locations/events, even by non MIDI/Musical people-- at ACTs for example.
(not that there's NO MIDI/Musical people at ACTs, but you know what I
mean) We are working on putting together some form of "kit" including
the recommended equipment, documentation, and of course all the
marketing messages free of charge, so that if we cannot entertain the
demo personally, you will have the opportunity to do it yourself.
-TR
|
2409.18 | | DCSVAX::COTE | It's wierd in your neighborhood... | Wed Aug 15 1990 21:00 | 4 |
| if there's a copyright in force, the holder is entitled to
reimbursement.
Edd
|
2409.19 | timely advice, perhaps? | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Thu Aug 16 1990 00:08 | 13 |
| Often those folks who gig have already paid for the privilege by paying
royalties. For example, my landlord who gigs pays these through extra
charges on the sequences he buys. I think it does not matter how much
you play of a tune if it can be identified as a copyrighted piece. If
I were you I would run, not walk, to your legal representative. This
could be a potentially embarassing situation for Digital - especially
if the press were to get hold of it. Having thousands hurts your case
because of the number of folks who were entertained. Please keep us
informed about how this goes. And, keep in mind that Digital has "deep
pockets" which is a difference between the company and those who gig
without paying royalties and "get away" with it.
Steve
|
2409.20 | Shut it down is always a safe answer... | SKIVT::HEARN | Time will tell... | Thu Aug 16 1990 08:24 | 5 |
|
It doesn't hurt to check with the legal beagles, but make sure you're
dealing with one who is familiar with the entertainment industry. A
lawyer who knows corporate law will not necessarily have the 'working'
knowledge needed for these types of questions.
|
2409.21 | How do you think composers get paid? | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Thu Aug 16 1990 10:25 | 8 |
| DEC was using pictures of certain Walt Disney characters to demonstrate
some of our early graphics terminals at trade shows. Nobody watching
complained then either.
Until a Disney lawyer walked up and told us to cut it out or face a
lawsuit.
There is plenty of non-copyrighted music out there you could use.
|
2409.22 | Use of Copyright without permission is VERY bad. | SAINT::STCLAIR | | Thu Aug 16 1990 10:43 | 35 |
|
You are putting Digital at great risk both legally and from the perception
of being a bad company that steals. (Thats the way it would be run
through the press.)
A friend of mine had a coffee house in Maynard. He had an open mike
and every once in a while a "paid" performer too. It was a shoestring
operation. Somebody came in one day and said he owed a couple hundred
bucks a week to ASCAP (or whoever reperesents music copyrights). He
said under pain of forclousre maybe and never heard from them again.
By the way the guy never paid for his coffee either. %^)
In a former life we were presenting seminars. A co-worker attended
a competing seminar and copied one slide from their handouts for his
program. A few months later a student in the seminar picked up his
camara when the slide was on screen photographed it and sued us. I
still remember him saying to me, "I shouldn't worry it was only one
slide".
I talked with members of another seminar program and asked for permission
to repsorduce materials with appropirate credit given. (We weren't competing
and it seemed ok.) The person I spoke said it sounded like a good idea
because it would promote their program. I sent a follow up letter thanking
them and detailing which slides I wanted to use and how I would indicate their
ownership of the work. I received a letter back from their lawyers
(half the page was names of lawyers) saying "No conversation had ever
taken place."
Another friend of mine had a radio ad (prepared by the station) that included
a little harmonica riff. He got a very angry call from the musician.
He forwarded the call to the station and his ad was pulled immeadiately
and redone.
|
2409.23 | NEVER use protected material | MILKWY::JANZEN | Commerce settles on every tree | Thu Aug 16 1990 11:21 | 19 |
| When Laurie Anderson performed at the Bershire performance center a
month ago, she talked about how a japanese car commercial use something
so close to O, Superman (the pulsing voice, and even the same "chord
progression" if you could call it that, and she contacted them. She
didn't give the outcome, but I got the impression they stopped.
Once someone said a wine commerical in California did the same thing,
but we didn't know what happened.
I am extremely careful not to use other poeple's material in
performance. ONCE I played music by another person, I got him to send
a letter giving me permission.
Performance artists often use protected material, and I tell all my PA
friends never do that. Stories are, an agent hears of it and it stops,
but there's no suit, they just say "stop it." I mean poetry and
writing and plays.
Performance art is often for audiences of 20 in downtown lofts.
But they still can't afford being liable; they're broke.
Maybe that's why no one sues.
;-)
Tom
|
2409.24 | Where Will It All End? | AQUA::ROST | Bad imitation of Rick Calcagni | Thu Aug 16 1990 11:32 | 10 |
|
Recently, both Bette Midler and Tom Waits have been awarded damages in
cases over commercials that used "soundalikes". The Midler case was
over that "Do you want to dance?" car commercial (Mercury?). In both
cases it was argued that viewers (listeners) would think it was the
"real" artist.
Does this mean Bruce Stringbean can sue John Melonhead now?
Brian
|
2409.25 | ASCAP/BMI collects the fees | NAVIER::STARR | Would you like to go to heaven tonite | Thu Aug 16 1990 12:27 | 11 |
| > Cover bands go out and play copyrighted music all the time for promotional
> purposes, they're promoting themselves... should they/do they pay any fees?
The acts themselves don't pay any fees. But the clubs/facilities they play at
do, and that covers all the acts that play there. ASCAP and BMI are the two
non-profit organizations that collect these fees, then distribute them to
the artists/publishers/songwriters. You might want to check with either of
these organizations to find out how to 'do the right thing'. (Sorry, I don't
know where/how to contact them....)
alan
|
2409.26 | this might be old | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Thu Aug 16 1990 13:15 | 12 |
|
ASCAP
10 Speen St
Framingham MA
(508)875-3515
Remember if you call, and you give them your name, you're bagged.
CdH
|
2409.27 | Wow, help! | RANGER::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 16 1990 13:45 | 16 |
|
Wow, what a can of worms that was! I never realized all the legal
implications. (great info and "war" stories, thanks!) I agree though,
where can I find a corporate laywer at DEC who knows enough about the
music/entertainment sides of things? Usually our trade show/marketing
people are very good about catching things like that, at least for
further investigation. In fact, the video we use at the end to sync to,
has cuts of footage from the Bicentinial celebration at the Statue
of Liberty that we had to pay $25/sec for!
> There's plenty of non-copyrighted music out there you could use...
What's the fastest way to find out whether a certain piece has any
current copyrights on it?
-TR
|
2409.28 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Thu Aug 16 1990 13:56 | 10 |
| The fastest way is to look for copyright notices in a publication.
It's usually a copyright symbol followed by (minimally) the year of the
copyright. There might also be the name of the copyright owner. If it
is music that you've heard on the radio, better plan on it being
copyrighted. Even though your legal people may not know what to do,
they should know other people who should know. So, I'd start with your
own legal people and alert them to the situation ... today.
Steve
|
2409.29 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Thu Aug 16 1990 14:28 | 13 |
| Depends what radio station you listen to. :)
Anything written earlier than 1900 is *probably* not copyrighted, but
no guarantees. Note that even sheet music for Beethoven will have a
copyright notice on the bottom, but that is for the publisher of that
particular score, not for the music contained therein. Sometimes it
is the *arrangement* that is copyrighted.
As for DEC legal help, start with the Media Services department in
Bedford. They have to worry about this for the training videos they
produce and probably know which lawyer will understand the issues.
Make it clear that you are not interested in recorded music, but in
performance rights.
|
2409.30 | Get the right DEClawyer | OLDTMR::STCLAIR | | Thu Aug 16 1990 15:34 | 10 |
|
I was once told that there are two types of lawyers. That is the
kind that work full time for a company. There are corporate lawyers
and there are people "in the field". The main distinction is that when
you have a problem/question the corporate lawyer will review it after
you research and write it. The field lawyer will right it for you. My
informant was a "corporate" lawyer for a Fortune 10 firm and my
personal experience has been the same. Any observations?
|
2409.31 | | KEYS::MOELLER | Run, Toto, run! | Thu Aug 16 1990 17:50 | 11 |
| I spoke to John McLaughlin's lawyer in New York this morning. We're
negotiating a mechanical rights license fee for version 9.Edd of my
arrangement of "Meeting of the Spirits", an early (and misnamed)
version of which some of you heard on Commusic 7. Yes, I'm serious
about it, and am putting together another album.
Perhaps this guy would do some moonlighting for DEC...
MAIL me if you want his name/#, Tom
karl
|
2409.32 | hypothetical thinking to understanding | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Aug 16 1990 18:04 | 8 |
| What are the legal implications of someone in the audience requesting a bit
of a tune and the folks doing the demo playing a few bars. Would you just pay
a blanket fee to ASCAP and/or BMI or would you have to c"clear" each tune
beforehand?
Thanks
Chad
|
2409.33 | We're not as litigatious over here ;-) | WARNUT::KAYD | WORM-mode noter | Fri Aug 17 1990 05:24 | 22 |
| Without wanting to further complicate the issue, be aware that the law
around this can change dramatically from country to country. In the UK
you do not have to pay copyright provided that you play less than a certain
amount of the tune. I don't know how long 'a certain amount' is, but it's
of the order of 20 seconds. We had a spell in the UK a few years ago of
chart records made up of snippets of old hits sequed together (under the
group name 'Stars on 45'). The people behind these records did not have to
pass any royalties on to the original arists.
We could get into a discussion on whether samples can be copyrighted too,
but I think that that would get too complex and emotive :-)
Why not just stick to jamming a twelve bar ?
As a further idea, you might want to consider encouraging some audience
participation - this would conclusively prove that it's not done with
smoke and mirrors ! (Get a MIDI guitar and you'd increase your chances of
getting people to join in)
Cheers,
Derek.
|
2409.34 | Someone Club me! | RANGER::ROBERT | | Fri Aug 17 1990 15:26 | 21 |
|
Well it looks like what we want to do is handle it how the clubs do...
but let me get this strait: They a pay a certain fee (monthly,
yearly?) and that covers them for any artist(s) to come and perform
anybody's song? Or do they have to still keep track of what songs are
done much like a radio station keeps a log of songs aired?
We could stick to a 12 bars jam, but that's what we use for the solos
part of the demo, albeit they don't have to be the same 12 bars jam.
Still, we don't want to bore their eardrums... which is why we like
having the selection of songs. This is our audience participation
(although we have considered what was mentioned in the last reply)
Most people can recognize the song and then relate to the parts being
added. And although we could have every song on the list
pre-sequenced, and being doing the equivalent of "lip-syncing" on the
keyboards, I think it's pretty obviously it's all being done live.
(We've had enough "bloops" in our performances that gets heard on
every pass of the track to ensure that!)
-TR
|
2409.35 | Did you ever hear a Next? | ALLVAX::NICKERSON | | Fri Aug 17 1990 22:48 | 14 |
| Have to add my 2 cents worth.
I was out in San Diego in June and supported a show on project management.
It wasn't very exciting, but while I was there I heard this great music
coming from somewhere at the show. When I had a break I tracked it down.
It was coming from a Next Computer via Bose speakers. The person at the
show had stored the output from a CD player on a disk in the Next and was
playing it back from a file through a DAC contained in the Next. Once the
sound is in the file you can do anything with it, edit, send, append, etc.
Simple, but very impressive. Someday when all workstations have DACs you
will be able to send a voice message, music, sound of a simulation, just
like a mail message.
Dana
|
2409.36 | | NAVIER::STARR | Would you like to go to heaven tonite | Sat Aug 18 1990 11:42 | 21 |
| > They a pay a certain fee (monthly, yearly?) and that covers them for any
> artist(s) to come and perform anybody's song?
Yes. The fee is based on things like the size of the place, how many nights it
has entertainment, etc. Then here is some sort of formula they use to figure
out how much to charge.
> Or do they have to still keep track of what songs are done much like a
> radio station keeps a log of songs aired?
Nope. What ASCAP and BMI do is that they go to sample places (different ones
all the time) and listen to the songs played, then multiply that out to
represent the whole country. I don't believe that anything is submitted by
the club, just the (annual? monthly? weekly?) fee.
Sounds like that is what you need. And with the frequency of your performance,
and number of songs, I imagine the fee will be quite low. (I think I remember
hearing that an average club might pay a $100-$150 dollars a month, and that's
for having music 4-5 nights a week. So its not a whole lot.
alan
|
2409.37 | | 4GL::DICKSON | | Sat Aug 18 1990 17:45 | 6 |
| re .35
You don't have to wait. There are 'workstations' with DACs today.
Not made by DEC of course. ("Those things are just for games.")
For example, every Apple Macintosh every shipped has been able to
playback digitized sounds. (not CD quality, but good enough for speech
even in the early models.)
|
2409.38 | what can you do????? | MILKWY::JANZEN | | Sat Aug 18 1990 20:47 | 11 |
| The Amiga has a pair of cheap DACs in it; it's $550, basic.
I tried to persuade a research group in here to use a DSP Qbus board
instead of MIDI gear to implement audio feedback for user interfaces,
but they went with
MIDI. I still can't believe it. It's in public notes in this
conference.
When I interviewed with a product group, I tried to persuade to put a
DAC on there for voice mail, but those were deaf ears. "keep the price
point down" they said. The amiga is $550.
The Dac is probably 50 cents in quantity (8 bit).
Tom
|
2409.39 | I agree with Tom, and ... | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Sat Aug 18 1990 23:02 | 33 |
| I tried getting a mod to the LK201 that would put a cheap mic and a
cheap DAC onto it. No go. Ironically, software standards already exist
to integrate sound with mail messages. But, we don't yet have the
hardware (other than DECtalk or somesuch) to gain widespread acceptance,
as I understand it. Near as I can tell, DEC doesn't want to add these
kinds of capabilities unless it can be done in an expensive fashion.
It's kind of like the $200 mouse we send with our equipment ...
The old Commodore 64 I used to have could do a lot more with sound than
my GPX can do. From a customer's point of view, our workstations
should be able to do more in such respects than their cheapie machines
can do. It doesn't cost that much, either, to match or add such
capabilities. For another example, Thinking Machines includes an array
of blinking lights with their supercomputers. All they do is blink.
And it's all for show. But, it gives customers the feeling that
they've purchased a neat machine. And, customer perspective is what
counts. What do we give customers? Well, when they fire up a machine
they get a few beeps and a window system. They might run a demo game
or two. They have to work at it to convince themselves that they just
bought a neat machine.
But, what would happen if when they booted up the machine started
talking to them and invited them to play a game? Or, maybe some
pleasant tune played along with some spiffy graphics. Now, all this
could be defeated, but the customer would immediately wow anyone that
stood around to watch them pull it out of the crate. It wouldn't cost
much. It could have a lot of impact on customer perspective. We're
kidding ourselves if we think that we're "too sophisticated", "too
technical" or "too cost conscious" to do it. Truth be known, we're
"too stupid" to think it won't matter to our customers and that it's
not worth the extra $2 per machine to boost customer perception.
Steve
|
2409.40 | yeah! | LNGBCH::STEWART | | Sun Aug 19 1990 00:12 | 14 |
|
Damn good point, Steve. A little show business polish would
really be nice. I can see some analogy to the plastic puke
packaging material KO complained about in '82(?). And the
earlier reply about integrating the speaker and mike into the
keyboard is too good. Someone at Digital should begin the legal
paperwork to protect that concept.
|
2409.41 | Sound the alarm | RANGER::ROBERT | | Mon Aug 20 1990 10:35 | 14 |
|
Yes, I agree, sound is too simple a thing to add for DEC to have waited
this long. Even my Apple II+ had a built in speaker that you could
"cycle" and by POKEing and PEEKing the right addresses you could do
crude but usuable sound generation. Enough that Music Education
Programs that made use of the speaker became very popular.
I've worked on DECs platforms from the PRO 350/380 to the LYNX,
Firefox, etc. And have been very dissapointed that nothing from their
PC to their high-end graphics workstations could support more than a
"click" or a "beep" for sound!
-TR
|
2409.42 | | 4GL::DICKSON | | Mon Aug 20 1990 10:36 | 1 |
| Protect what concept? It is already being done. By others.
|
2409.43 | Close, no cigar! | RANGER::ROBERT | | Mon Aug 20 1990 10:57 | 18 |
|
The ASCAP info in .26 is correct. I just called and talked to someone
there. He said that they are currently working on licenses
specifically for trade shows that will be available shortly. He said
that the trade show itself would hold the license, and that would cover
all the exhibitors!
Unfortunately, it's not out yet (Except for Worcester, they made a
special arrangement because they've had so many requests for it
there!?) And he said the "Restaurant/Lounge/Club..." license wouldn't
hold for the trade show. In short, there's NOTHING available right
now that would cover us, save for getting individual permission from
each artist to use their material.
Hmmm...
-TR
|
2409.44 | The Creator Speaks... | SPCTRM::HART | | Wed Sep 05 1990 17:17 | 38 |
| Hi, I'm the guy who started this whole DEC, LANworks, Network,
DECworld, (it's had a few names!) MIDI Music demo. Just a few minor
corrections to some earlier replies. First off, the concept didn't
start on a cocktail napkin in a bar ( although that sounds good).
It started on a placemat in a Restaurant on Cape Cod on a Sunday
morning where I scratched the diagram for a network demo that would
1) show all of DEC's major integration messages and use lots of
our desktop products and software to record, share, print, display,
and playback music files as means of communicating Digital's PC
networking and client/server products. 2) To solve some file exchange
problems I foresaw in my own studio recording business. I drafted
a proposal that I sold to all levels of DEC management and received
development funding to pursue the idea. I was provided with a number
of DEC products to use in my studio to implement the first showing
at PC EXPO in NYC last June.
As Tom Robert has detailed in the earlier replies, we have a whole
sound stage of MIDI, lighting, audio, and networked computers which
combines to give an extremely entertaining, relevant to what we're
selling and technologically sophisticated way of getting Digital's
presence very well known at all the major events we plan to bring
the show to. I plan to expand the demonstation concept to incude
imaging, postscript score printing with DEC products(already working
in the studio), CDA applications (i.e. DECwrite using display p.s.,
text and mayvbe a ccd camera snapshot of a show prospect to make
an on the spot album cover as a take home souvinir). There's also
interest in bringing the Ultrix world into the fold. We hope to
start on this after our Networld Dallas show.
I'm also discussing with Tom how we'll consider getting interested
Commusic fans involved. Any ideas, please feel free to contact me
and keep the conference posted on your thoughts. See my note 3 intro
for more on whats in the studio on the cape....
I'm more accessable on SPCTRM::HART than in the conf. due to time
cramps!
Jack
|
2409.45 | | WEFXEM::COTE | To play, turn bottom up... | Wed Sep 05 1990 17:25 | 5 |
| Gee, all this whiz-bang stuff at DecWorld and I just have to wonder...
Do we sell *anything* with a MIDI port?
Edd
|
2409.46 | DECstation PCs make Music w/MIDI | SPCTRM::HART | | Wed Sep 05 1990 17:37 | 4 |
| Well, you can buy any one of DEC's DECstation PCs and plug in an
MPU and s/w for an extra $200 or so. That's what we do.
Jack
|
2409.47 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Wed Sep 05 1990 23:17 | 8 |
| Or, you can go to Radio Shack and buy about the same thing for less.
It's great to see MIDI and DEC get together. Too bad it's not really
showcasing anything that we would really sell it for. It would be nice
if someday DEC became a viable source for equipment for the home
hacker or the average musician or band. Wouldn't it be neat to see a
VT320 at Sears' Brand Central? ;^)
Steve
|
2409.48 | DIGITAL sells at SEARS | KEYS::MOELLER | corporation penguin | Thu Sep 06 1990 00:58 | 6 |
| > <<< Note 2409.47 by RICKS::SHERMAN "ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326" >>>
>Wouldn't it be neat to see a VT320 at Sears' Brand Central? ;^)
.. when Roll-Royce sells parts thru Manny,Moe, and Jack's
karl
|
2409.49 | RISC MIDI | EEMELI::PLEINO | Pasi Leino, DECtop Helsinki 879-4451 | Thu Dec 27 1990 05:48 | 5 |
| Any news in the fields of getting a MIDI-interface for a DS5000?
Who could be working on this? There must be somebody!
-Pasi-
|