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Plunderphonics

Brief Description
Featuring interviews with John Oswald, Negativland, and others and drawing on a wealth of research on copyright and intellectual property, Plunderphonics explores the impact of a genre that made illegality a point of pride. In Plunderphonics, Matthew Blackwell tells the story of a group of musicians... Read More
Format: Paperback / softback
$3299
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Featuring interviews with John Oswald, Negativland, and others and drawing on a wealth of research on copyright and intellectual property, Plunderphonics explores the impact of a genre that made illegality a point of pride.

In Plunderphonics, Matthew Blackwell tells the story of a group of musicians who advocated for changes to the copyright system by deploying unlicensed samples in their recordings. The composer John Oswald, who coined the genre term "plunderphonics," was threatened with legal action by the Canadian Recording Industry Association on behalf of Michael Jackson. The Bay Area group Negativland was sued by Island Records on behalf of U2 for their parody of the band. These artists attracted media attention to their cause in a bid to expand fair use protections. Later, the Australian band the Avalanches encountered the limitations of the music licensing system during the release of their debut album, having to drop several samples that could not be successfully cleared. Finally, American DJ and producer Girl Talk released a series of albums featuring hundreds of uncleared samples and successfully avoided lawsuits by publicly arguing a fair use defence.

This book narrates the conflicts between these artists and the recording industry. Blackwell places plunderphonics in the cultural contexts of postmodernism, Situationism, and culture jamming and analyses responses to the genre from the media and the legal system. Along with histories of each artist, changes to American copyright law are tracked through important cases like Grand Upright v. Warner Bros. and Bridgeport v. Dimension Films. Though the legal terrain did not shift in favour of plunderphonic musicians, they changed public perception of fair use and enabled more widespread sampling in underground music.

Series: Genre: A 33 1/3 Series

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Book Details

INFORMATION

ISBN: 9798765119488

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

Format: Paperback / softback

Date Published: 13 November 2025

Country: United States

Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic

Audience: General / adult

DIMENSIONS

Spine width: 12.0mm

Width: 126.0mm

Height: 196.0mm

Weight: 220g

Pages: 184

About the Author

Matthew Blackwell is a music critic and writer whose work has appeared in Pitchfork, Bandcamp Daily, Tone Glow, the LA Review of Books, and elsewhere. He holds a Ph.D in English Literature from the University of Iowa. He lives in Tenerife, Spain.

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