Magnatune and Creative Commons Announce Lisa DeBenedictis Remix Contest - Winners to Receive Magnatune Recording Contract
PRESS RELEASE
May 19, 2005
For Immediate Release
(Berkeley, California) - "Let your imagination run wild and get
creative," is the slogan from Magnatune and Creative Commons on their
latest venture.
Online record label Magnatune (www.magnatune.com) and non-profit
creative licensing organization Creative Commons announce that they will
co-host a digital music remix contest and will begin accepting entries
on June 15, 2005.
The contest will be hosted at CC Mixter (www.ccmixter.org) and features
the music of Magnatune rock artist Lisa DeBenedictis
(http://www.magnatune.com/artists/debenedictis), who will voluntarily
have her work sliced, diced and mixed by contestants.
Music samples and contest rules are currently posted at CC Mixter.
Among the prizes for the remix contest is the opportunity for the winner
to appear on the Lisa DeBenedictis Remix Compilation album and an
assortment of cash prizes.
"Remixed music is an exciting new kind of musical art form emerging in the
open environment of internet file sharing," said Magnatune founder and CEO,
John Buckman. "Anyone with a creative urge can take existing music tracks
and change them into something completely new and different. This kind of
event helps artists to stretch their limits and gain access to a wider
variety of great music and we expect some really fantastic remix
arrangements to come out of the contest."
Contest entrants will have the opportunity to use Magnatune music to create
their own remix compositions and submit their best works. Music samples
will be posted on the CCMixter Web site beginning in mid-May. The contest
will officially open on May 16 and will begin accepting entries through
July 31, 2005. More details regarding contest rules are available at
www.CCMixter.org. Lisa DeBenedictis is one of Magnatune's more than 175
artists who enjoys 50-50 profit splitting and full rights to her music. A
"one-woman operation," she plays a variety of instruments including piano,
guitar, keyboard, violin, oboe and mandolin. DeBenedictis is the sole
writer, performer and producer of all her music. Her songs have been
described as ethereal, fresh and original, earning her the comparisons
other well-known female soloists including Tori Amos and Sarah McLachlan.
Prior to going solo, DeBenedictis performed in a rock duo called "Ring of
Nine" and California Avant Rock duo "DirtyDirtyRockStar." In addition to
writing songs, Lisa composes instrumental music for film. The concept of
"open source" file-sharing originated in the computer software world and
has moved into music. Individual tracks, a drum or bass line within a
recording, can be taken and remixed with other tracks to create a
completely new composition. Other musicians can then modify, improve or
add to the "source" without worrying about obtaining permission from the
original artists. Unlike other illegal music remix contests where an
artist's work has been taken and sold without the artist's permission,
Magnatune and Creative Commons have partnered with Lisa DeBenedictis for this effort. Contest
participants will be allowed to freely copy selected Magnatune music to
produce their works.
Fellow Magnatune recording artist and CC Mixter contest manager Victor
Stone, of the group "Four Stones," has been remixing music for several
years. "It is incredibly fun and inspiring to be able to use the best
music and make it your own," said Stone. "It makes remixing a natural
extension of what composers have been doing for thousands of years."
Producers often work for months to build their multi-layered remix
compositions. Remix tracks can be highly sophisticated with limitless
musical sound samples and layers.
Magnatune music is available for sharing through use of Creative Commons
licensing. The Creative Commons license allows for free sharing and
building upon existing works, be it musical, written, or images. "We have
been using the Creative Commons copyright licensing very successfully,"
said Buckman. "Through open-source licensing we are able to offer a fair
deal to our customers and musicians." Unusual in the music industry,
Magnatune splits profits from album sales with the artists and allows them
to keep the rights to their music.
# # #
About Creative Commons
A nonprofit founded in early 2002, Creative Commons promotes the
creative re-use of intellectual and artistic works-whether owned or in
the public domain-by empowering authors and audiences.
It is sustained by the generous support of the Center for the Public
Domain, the John D.
and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation, the Omidyar Network, and the Hewlett Foundation.
For more information, visit http://creativecommons.org.
# # #
About Magnatune
Founded in 2003, Magnatune (www.magnatune.com) is an independent,
online record label that hand selects its own artists, sells its catalog of
music through online downloads and print-on-demand CDs and licenses music
for commercial and non-commercial use. Based on the principle that "we are
not evil," the company offers fair-trade music to consumers by equally
sharing all revenue from the sale of albums with artists and allowing
artists to retain full rights to their music. All music can be previewed
free of charge with a "try before you buy" philosophy. Customers can also
choose how much they want to pay for the music with pricing ranging from
$5-18 for a downloadable album or print-on-demand CD. Magnatune is a music
business where everybody wins.
# # #
Press: Email Teresa Malango or call her at (510) 289-3781.