Vaidhayanathan, Said. "Hep Cats and Copy Cats: American Music Challenges the Copyright Tradition." Copyrights and Copywrongs:
The Rise of Intellectual Property and How It Threatens Creativity. New York: New York UP, 2003. 117-48.
Vaidhayanathan begins his chapter on the ethos of sampling in American music by claiming that "music, more than any other vehicle of culture, collapses the gap that separates idea from expression." Walter Pater ventured the same observation in the late nineteenth century, speculating that all arts aspire to the condition of music. This introduces great difficulty into the realm of copyright, which identifies protectable expression by consistently separating out idea from expression. Taking the case of "second takers," samplers building on the creativity of particular artist or, in the case of the blues, a common musical catalog, Vaidhayanathan argues that these important engines of culture need more protection than the idea/expression distinction can provide. In the case of American music, he goes so far as to claim that repetition and revision are "central tropes." The Blues tradition, more specifically, views the elaboration or improvisation of traditional compositions as the norm, as against the Constitution's model of progress or Romantic models of genius. If this is true, copyright law overprotects large swathes of American music.
The distinction Vaidhayanathan draws in this article between legal issues and aesthetic and ethical issues begs of the question of whether blues compositions ought to be eligible for protection. Then again, he also seems to support the "total concept and feel" test for substantial similarity. This would locate the aesthetic and ethical issues he cares about within the purview of the law as currently formulated, except that the test applies to the performance of a song, rather than to its composition, as is currently the case. Performance, he argues, constitutes a substantial portion of the "value-added" aspect of a musical work. The overarching question, as I see it, involves the degree to which discrete areas of culture like the blues tradition can push back against legal protections designed to apply to all areas of culture. Established works reap the benefit of asymmetrical power, in the form of a large and powerful music industry lobby. The power balance in and of itself doesn't decide the question. Moreover, a tension between recourse to national tradition - the idea of "American music" - and recourse to ethnocentric explanation - in the histories of the blues and rap - might have been more clearly handled.
Vaidhayanathan delineates five reasons for sampling - to draw on the authority of a cultural touchstone, to produce a new version, to make a political statement, to express appreciation or acknowledge influence, and to create an ambient effect. Works that sample arguably deserve a hearing on each of these grounds, as five possibilities for the nature of a fair use claim. Sampling more often than not adds value to a work of art and thus transforms the sample. Moore's poetry might profitably be considered in light of these five species of sampling, to see whether they would be adequate in pursuit of a fair use claim.
tagged american_music blues copyright creative_labor sampling by fedors ...and 4 other people ...on 09-APR-09
Gregory, Janice. Quotation and Modern American Poetry: "Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads." Houston, TX: Rice UP, 1996.
Gregory's study compares the poetics of quotation in T.S. Eliot, William Carlos Williams, and Marianne Moore. Quotation, she argues, either draws on the authority of what a writer quotes or parodies that same authority. She identifies four pre-Modernist conceptions of the function of quotation, each allied with a different epoch: Christian antiquity and the medieval, Renaissance, and Romantic periods. Apostolic and Pauline texts quote Jesus and the Old Testament to invoke the awe of revelation, the binding force of law, and to establish their own authority. Medieval writers invoke the same authority from non-Christian authors, especially Aristotle. The Renaissance, through figures like Erasmus and Cervantes, instigates the double character of quotation, useful for authorization and parody. The Romantic period witnesses the rise of a discourse of originality that created immense anxiety in poets like Coleridge and Wordsworth over their belatedness in relation to great poets like Milton. Their rare instances of quotation are in the service of transferring authority to modern, secular forces. Setting this anxiety in an American context, Emerson insists in the 1830s that originality and quotation are not mutually exclusive, thus setting the stage for poetry that acknowledges a great debt to tradition but nevertheless seeks to establish an original relation to the universe.
Gregory argues that Eliot, Williams, and Moore all employ quotation to explore the way authority is gendered, particularly with reference to America's belatedness in secular history. Borrowing on the work of Marie Borroff, Gregory demonstrates how Moore's inclusion of "promotional prose" and the text from park monuments, intimate conversations, volumes of natural history, and other non-canonical language alongside quotations from Yeats and allusions to Browning throws into question the hierarchies on which the authority of quotation rests. These "unauthoritative" texts enter the realm of literature for multiple purposes, among them revaluation, modest depersonalization, and the establishment maternal authority. Gregory also suggests that Moore's practice of quotation influenced T.S. Eliot, not the other way around, by convincing him that he could fashion poetry "out of a refusal to digest the fragments of the texts that inspired it." Gregory allows me to argue that Moore's practice of quotation serves several of the analogous functions that sampling serves in music, and subsequently that there might be a causal relationship between Moore's nationality and the views she held on quotation.
tagged authority intellectual_property modernism originality poetics quotation sampling by fedors ...on 09-APR-09



