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Mikemcnasty.co.uk seeks to teach the history of Go-Go and its culture. These pages contain backround information, history, bands, shot outs, crews, chat, bulletin boards,
free email, Mp3's and everything that we hope will bring Go-Go and its music to the next level! Many new and old Go-Go sites are now using the web to enhance and build the industry! From
old heads, to the new school this medium suits everyone. Thanks to its reach and the depth of our creativity. Unlike most mediums... such as radio, television, and the press, the World
Wide Web is a more flexible promotional tool. It's uses a flexible environment that simply aids, creates, enhances and accelerates growth and development.
Thousands of web sites worldwide in many genre's such as Country music, Pop music, Hip-Hop music and R&B are taken advantage of this medium.....Our turn, don't you think?
With the demise of Napster, the Mp3 community has switched to alternative mediums. Gnutella is a favorite. Ultimately the battle is still on but the movement is becoming more organized and internationalizing. As evident with http://gnutella.co.uk proving that the internet should rightly be called the World Wide Web. We've found a brilliant "Gnutella" program called "Bodetella" a 2.29 megabyte download is a must for your machine! Come back soon for more details
on Mp3 technology and it's future!
Contents:
Artists Sound Off Major artists have a lot to say about Napster:
"I just want my music to be out, and that's always been the main priority. It
was never really about getting paid. It was just getting people to hear my music
and say, 'Hey, I like your song.' So if Napster wants to put my song out so
people can download it or whatever, let 'em do it."
-- Billy Joe Armstrong (Green Day), Reuters, 2/12/2001
"Napster: It is the future, in my opinion. That's the way music is going to be
communicated around the world. The most important thing now is to embrace it,
and that was the spirit by which we did this co-promotion."
-- Dave Matthews (Dave Matthews Band), referring to his band's recent Featured
Music promotion with Napster, Billboard.com, 2/9/2001
"Most people I know who use Napster listen to stuff they've never heard before.
And then they get psyched and go out and buy the damn records. It's more like a
sampler."
- Ian MacKaye, recording artist, Fugazi and co-owner of Dischord Records,
Salon.com, 1/8/2001
"[Napster] makes artists ask why they are not in control of what they are doing.
Artists of any worth or strength will rise up and take control of the
situation."
-- Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics
"We believe that the Internet and Napster should not be ignored by the music
industry as tools to promote awareness for bands and market music."
-- Fred Durst (Limp Bizkit)
"The cool thing about Napster is that it...encourages enthusiasm for music in a
way that the music industry has long forgotten to do."
-- Thom Yorke (Radiohead), 10/9/2000
"There are a lot of bigger problems in the world than whether Napster succeeds
or fails...I don't think there is a malice coming out of Napster. We allowed
people to tape our concerts from the beginning, and the record company
questioned us about allowing that. But my thinking was that it only makes people
want to buy more and increases the devotion of people who are going to listen to
us."
-- Dave Matthews (Dave Matthews Band), Rolling Stone, 7/21/2000
"Napster could be a great way for people to hear your music who wouldn't have
the chance to hear it on the radio."
-- Madonna, Rolling Stone, 9/28/2000
"Stealing our copyright provisions in the dead of night when no-one is looking
is piracy. It's not piracy when kids swap music over the Internet using Napster.
There were one billion downloads last year but music sales are way up, so how is
Napster hurting the music industry? It's not. The only people who are scared of
Napster are the people who have filler on their albums and are scared that if
people hear more than one single they're not going to buy the album."
-- Courtney Love, NME, 6/29/2000
"We should think of (Napster) as a new kind of radio--a promotional tool that
can help artists who don't have the opportunity to get their music played on
mainstream radio or on MTV,"
-- Chuck D, New York Times, 4/30/2000
"Most people I know who listen to a lot of MP3s will download a lot of different
songs. And if they like the song, they'll go out and buy the album. The record
company doesn't want me to say this, but out of the millions of MP3 files that
are out there, if someone chooses to download one of my songs or an album of
mine, I'm very flattered."
-- Moby, Macaddict.com
"The Edge is very pro-Napster, actually," Bono says. "He thinks that as long as
people are using their computers for music, and not playing mindless games,
that's good. My feeling," he adds, "is that it's cool for people to share our
music -- as long as no one is making money from the process. We tell people who
come to our concerts that they can tape the shows if they want. I think it's
cool that people are so passionate about our music -- especially about this new
album, quite honestly."
-- Bono on The Edge (U2), Billboard.com, 9/29/2000
"It is a good way to promote your music, but copyright and things of that sort
are something that will have to be worked out and they will be worked out. I
remember when they didn't want you to have a VCR, but they worked it out and I
think for the best. Smart people always get together and work it out."
--B.B. King, Yahoo Entertainment News, 9/13/2000
"We have just finished a tour, we played in Barcelona, the next day the entire
performance was up on Napster and three weeks later when we got to play in
Israel the audience knew the words to all the new songs and it was wonderful.
Digital music is just one of many things that contribute to an artist getting
their message across and of course it is going to change record companies are
going to have to embrace it and change with it and find different ways of
getting revenue, maybe using Napster as a business model for their own on-line
thing."
-- Colin Greenwood (Radiohead), NME, 9/28/2000
"We're not afraid of the Internet. We think it's a very cool way to reach our
fans. If a band sells 12 million albums, what are we supposed to say? Oh, maybe
we could have sold 13 million if we had just been Internet Nazis. Frankly, at a
certain point, you have to say. Hey, let the people have the music."
-- Dexter Holland (Offspring), Inside.com, 9/15/2000
"I think it's a good idea because it's people trading music. It has nothing to
do with industry or finance, it's just people that want music and there's
nothing wrong with that. It's the same as someone turning on the f****** radio,
it's the same as someone putting a cassette in a cassette deck when the BBC
plays a special radio session. I don't think it's a crime, it's been going on
for years. It's the same as people making tapes for each other. The industry is
more threatened by it because it's the worldwide web and it's a broader scope of
trading, but I don't think it's such a f******* horrible thing. The first thing
we should do is get all the f****** millionaires to shut their mouths, stop
bitching about the 25 cents a time they're losing."
-- Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters), dotmusic.com, 9/15/2000
"I can't believe Napster might be shut down. Music is for everybody. When people
get excited about it, whether from hearing it on the radio or borrowing a record
from a friend, or accessing it through Napster, they buy records and come out to
shows."
-- Ben Folds (Ben Folds Five), Entertainment Weekly, 8/11/2000
"What record companies don't really understand is that Napster is just one
illustration of the growing frustration over how much the record companies
control what music people get 2 hear < over how the air waves, record labels and
record stores, which r now all part of this 'system' that recording companies
have pretty much succeeded in establishing, r becoming increasingly dominated by
musical "products" 2 the detriment of real music. Y should the record company
have such control over how he, the music lover, wants 2 xperience the music?...
>From the point of view of the real music lover, what's currently going on can
only b viewed as an xciting new development in the history of music. And,
4tunately 4 him, there does not seem 2 b anything the old record companies can
do about preventing this evolution from happening."
-- Prince, NPGonlineLTD.com
"The amount of time companies spend stressing about getting a record on radio,
you would think that the idea of some big, global listening post would make
perfect sense. And while enough people enjoy the social interaction of going
into a record shop and buying something to keep and cherish, I don't see why we
can't all live in one big happy music-sharing world."
-- Damian Harris (owner of SKINT) (Fatboy Slim's label), NME, 9/8/2000
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Go-Go Videos
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