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Meet the Overdub Tampering Committee

p2pnet news | Music:- News of an amazing, hitherto secretive, group of pro musicians with a serious interest in musical integrity or, rather, their perception of it, has emerged.

You’ll either thank them as musical purists whose efforts will help make sure you actually get what you thought you were getting, or you’ll say they’re a crew of arrogant upstarts with the nerve to think their unasked for editing efforts improve the quality of your downloads —- whether you wanted them to, or not.

Either way, they’re guaranteed to give the Screaming Copyright Infringement Horrors to Warner Music, EMI, Vivendi Universal and Sony BMG’s RIAA, the members of the Big 4 organised music cartel.

Calling themselves the Overdub Tampering Committee, “Your copy of your favorite album has us all over it,” they say, because about four years ago, “one of us downloaded a newly leaked album by a very popular band.”

OTC goes on:

“Excitedly listening to it for the first time we noticed a very out of place death metal song in the middle of the album. The obvious genre change and the ability to check the track listing and run time for each song on a reliable website made it easy to sniff out that this leak had been tampered with.”

So, “We discarded the leaked files and waited patiently for the actual release where upon we bought it in a store.”

Here’s the OTC online manifesto in full >>>:

What?

We are a group of musicians who have downloaded newly leaked albums by popular artists, quickly recorded many subtle overdubs over the work, and then re-leaked it to the internet. We have done this for about three years now. We used all kinds of instruments with recording techniques that matched the audio quality of the album in question. We used a varied amount of re-leaking methods including but not limited to Soulseek, OiNK, The Pirate Bay, Limewire and zipped files hosted on sites like YouSendIt or Mediafire with links spread out on hundreds of message boards. Our turn over time was usually very small so often our version of the artist’s album was online for download within hours of its original leak. If you illegally download music on the internet the chances that our work is in your collection is very, very likely! In fact, you might have a whole lot of us!

Why?

One of the things that’s always shocked us about people ‘illegally downloading’ music is the blind faith that what they’ve downloaded is the actual finished product that the band has released (or is about to release). We download and we had this faith too. But one day, about 4 years ago, one of us downloaded a newly leaked album by a very popular band. Excitedly listening to it for the first time we noticed a very out of place death metal song in the middle of the album. The obvious genre change and the ability to check the track listing and run time for each song on a reliable website made it easy to sniff out that this leak had been tampered with. We discarded the leaked files and waited patiently for the actual release where upon we bought it in a store.

This got us thinking: what if this problem got more insidious, subtle, and widespread? What if there was a network of musicians who got a hold of albums right as they leaked, added subtle yet very much additional overdubs all over the album, and then re-leaked it to the internet?

We imagined a scenario where someone would get in a car with their friend, he would put on the new _____ album, and you would say, “Where’s all the piano parts?” to which the driver would say, “What piano parts? This album is all guitars and drums.” Finally, you would scratch your head and say, “Not my copy!”

It would be bewildering.

It would be irksome.

It would be annoying.

We set out to make that specific bewildering, annoyance a possibility.

We guessed that if this could become a widespread phenomenon it would really highlight one of the biggest flaws with the ‘illegal downloading’ method of obtaining music. i.e You Do Not Know That Someone Hasn’t Fucked With Your Favorite Band’s Album.

Attempting to police and punish ‘illegal downloaders’ with lawsuits and fines is misguided and, in our opinion, a waste of time. This model treats the music fans as criminals. That’s an insane business model. But we expect nothing less than insanity from large, crumbling corporations. We do not know how the music industry will change in the next few years and we don’t know how a method will arise to ensure that musicians are properly paid for their recorded work. We have no solutions. All we set out to do here is jump-start a conversation. It would delight us if our relentless efforts over the last few years might force you to doubt what you consider to be a pristine source of untampered music. We’re here to tell you it’s far from pristine.

However, because of the subtlety and the careful nature of our work we realized that our mission might go unnoticed forever (with the possible exception of the scenario explained above, or the artist themselves checking out leaked versions of their own albums) unless we made a formal declaration of what we’ve been up to and this is just that. We have confirmed the widespread disbursment of our work via all kinds of methods including download counts, hearing our versions of others’ songs on the radio (!), and re-downloading albums, years later, from different sources and finding our handy-work still firmly in place. By uploading our copy of the albums within a short time of the initial leak we have ensured its widespread use and lasting shelf life.

We love music. We love music makers and music collectors. But right now the scales are incorrectly balanced. We all know this. This is our attempt to throw a few ounces of weight on the other side of the scale.

We are honored to now be permanent parts of so many music lovers collection.

We would be glad to conduct interviews or answer any questions the press may have about our project but please note that at this point we have chosen to remain completely anonymous. Thank you so much for your attention.

Please direct all questions to OverdubTampering@gmail.com

Sincerely,
The Overdub Tampering Committee

And for your further edification, here’s the first round of questions and answers >>>

Q: Were your overdubs meant to make the music sound better or worse? How subtle were they?

A: Neither good or bad. Neither enhancing or detracting. Simply additional. They weren’t meant to be anything but additional music layered on top of what was already considered a completed product. We use the word subtle because the overdubs were designed to blend in with the music that was already there. We wanted our overdubs to be believable. Upon hearing our accordion solo in someone else’s song you might think, “Boy, that’s odd” but you would hopefully not realize it was an effect of malicious tampering from the get go.

Q: You mention that you’re all musicians? Do you have recorded works that are downloaded illegally? Did you overdub your own records?

A: Yes, we’re all in bands that have albums we’ve seen being “illegally” shared on peer to peer networks. Yes, we made overdub versions of our own albums. That was particularly fun for us.

Q: Doesn’t the fact that you also illegally download music (as you implied in the manifesto) sort make this whole thing a bunch of hypocritical bullshit?

A: If you want to come to that conclusion that is fine with us. In fact any conclusion, or reaction, to this project will be welcomed with open arms from us here at the Overdub Tampering Committee. We used the phrase “illegally downloaded” so much in the manifesto because that’s the accepted, currently understood term for what we’re talking about. We don’t personally think it’s illegal, or necessarily wrong, but that it’s a system with holes that will probably rapidly change over the coming years. Many members of the Overdub Tampering Committee, for example, “illegally download” albums they’re interested in hearing, take a listen, and if they love it they purchase a hard copy on cd or vinyl (most of us are big album artwork/packaging fetishists). We’re not really here to point fingers and declare who’s the good guy or the bad guy in all of these scenarios. All we wanted to do was fuck with the treasure everyone’s hunting for to realign everyone’s perspective.

Q: Don’t major labels leak fake versions of their own newly released catalog?

A: Yes, we’ve heard it’s common practice for some record labels or guns for hire (such as MediaDefender and MediaSentry) to leak files that contain no music, or garbled music, or other tactics like actually trying to physically disrupt a download. In our minds this is akin to creating a “fun digital dragon” that music lovers will happily spar off against and defeat in order to, eventually, get the album they wish to hear. Please join us in heartily LOLing at the idea that the record companies actually pay these companies good money to carry out this useless bullshit. We have no interest in creating dragons. Rather, we here at the Overdub Tampering Committee have been happily building Trojan Horses for years that we would now like to spring open and let the soldiers spill out. Like we said earlier, and above, those soldiers have very likely been in your record collection for awhile now. We’d just like to let you know that they’re there now.

Definitely stay tuned.

(Thanks, YKW)

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9 Responses to “Meet the Overdub Tampering Committee”

  1. defib Says:

    If the overdubs are so subtle as to be unnoticeable, who cares? This is the proverbial tempest in the teapot. Only at the point where the tampering becomes obvious will the listener care*; but at that point the file is considered “bad” and is discarded for a pristine copy. This method of subversion undermines itself, because as soon as it rises to the level of “subversion,” the subversion is quickly discarded. It’s self-refuting.

    *I suppose there are a few pathological OCD listeners who will go crazy listening for the possibility of surreptitious overdubs in their music collection, but they will do that now anyway even if there are no actual overdubs in existence, now that this manifesto has been released. Anyone that concerned with the fidelity of their music is not going to be happy with the quality of downloadable mp3’s anyway.

    Thus I conclude that this feat is primarily masturbatory in nature, primarily. In essence.

  2. Henry Emrich Says:

    I LOVE this idea!

    The “quality” is already abysmally bad on many tracks you can get from p2p networks.
    this is brilliant!
    But they don’t go far enough:

    1. Somebody needs to create really cheezy cover-versions of songs (the worst, most unlistenable ones they can). Then tag and label them as the “real” thing. This will increase the possibility that if you use the p2p networks, in addition to visues, spyware, adware, and really badly encoded files, you’ll end up with the equivalent of one of those knockoff CD’s done by “the hit crew”.

    Lower the (already dismal) “quality” of the p2p crap, and REALL music fans will stop bitching about how CD’s “cost too much” and/or the authorized downloads have “DRM”. (DRM only interests most of them because they want to pirate the stuff over onto p2p networks anyway.)

    These guys rule!

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Meh

  4. Mostly Harmless Says:

    Henry Emrich Says:
    “Lower the (already dismal) “quality” of the p2p crap, and REALL music fans will stop bitching about how CD’s “cost too much” and/or the authorized downloads have “DRM”. (DRM only interests most of them because they want to pirate the stuff over onto p2p networks anyway.)”

    So, if everything was crap quality on P2P networks then people would not bitch about the price of CDs? And “most of them” are interested in buying downloads without DRM mainly so they can “pirate the stuff over onto p2p networks”?

    Yeah right…

    I will not stoop to name calling, but it is so tempting.

  5. Jon Says:

    Henry’s always good for a laugh ;)

    Cheers!

  6. melvillian Says:

    wow, we’re really dealing with the bottom of the barrel here. almost everything you could want is available in lossless quality, you just have to know where to look. not that i have any interest in “illegally downloading” music. really what’s the point because all mp3 rippers, players, headphones etc. all sound different anyway; everyone knows that your home stereo sounds different than your car, ipod, etc. i also find it highly unbelievable that these changes were so subtle that years later this group could still distinguish “their songs”. i’d like to see some proof, but even if they did produce “proof” whose to say that they didn’t just produce it on demand. circulating for years?! c’mon! the funny thing is that most music these days is crap anyway, so why the f- would you bother. that’s my $.02! ; )

  7. BOb Says:

    If you think that p2p is poor quality crap, as you put it, you are very wrong. Only if you are using the worst types of p2p services, ie: limewire, winmx, etc. will you get bad quality. The internet has lossless everything and the only way you will end up with poor quality, wrong, or infected rips is if you are completely ignorant to the ways of p2p. Even as far as the legit music services go, the bitrate and quality is already complete garbage. FLAC and high bitrate MP3’s are everywhere and the only people affected by this are the people who are already used to getting low quality, poorly labeled music from garbage p2p services (read: limewire).

    This will not slow down internet piracy at all. After all, music wants to be free and music gets what it wants.

  8. GoLeafsGo Says:

    Hmmmm…….and Paul McCartney is dead. He was replaced by a dopple-ganger after getting decapitated in a car wreck……George W. Bush is dead…..above the head…..wait, that one’s true! Jim Morrison and Elvis are sharing a split-level condo on an uncharted island somewhere near Bora Bora……

  9. Rohan Says:

    I personally think it’s a great idea, and not that hard to accomplish… The changes they talk about are just extra instruments (like their example, one day you hear the ‘real’ version and say ‘where’s the piano gone?’) so you wouldn’t notice it. The ‘problem’ of not noticing isn’t really a problem cause it sounds like they enjoy doing it, even if no one notices.

    The key point is that they are making people talk about it and pissing the labels off, so I say go for it! I actually want to listen to their stuff from an artistic perspective cause there’s several songs I’ve thought ‘a piano/accordian/triangle would sound great there, why didn’t they do it?’ and it’d be cool if these guys had added it…

    And @ Henry: I hate DRM because I use Linux. Linux doesn’t decode DRM. This means that (as happened a couple of months ago) I may download songs completely legally, only to have to find a friend with windows and a CD burner before I can listen. That ain’t right in any way shape or form. Also making crap versions defeats the point because when it’s obvious people just delete the bad stuff (as the overdubbers said themselves) so that would be even more pointless…

    Meh, rant done now! lol.

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