An angry email from the electronic artist, who is 'sick to death' of the industry's 'culturally ingrained disdain', has gone viral
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The electronic artist Whitey has used social networking services to share an email he sent to a London television production company that speaks out against the refusal to pay artists for their services.
While we're unable to see the original email sent by TV company Betty – which makes "modern and high-quality popular formats and factual television series", such as The Joy of Teen Sex and Freaky Eaters – the artist's response suggests that the firm had asked the musician to provide a licence, and claimed that Betty had "no budget for music". Whitey's email, which laments the industry's "culturally ingrained disdain for the musician", has since gone viral, with thousands of shares and likes on Facebook and retweets on Twitter voicing a growing dissatisfaction among artists who feel abused by the television industry.
At the end of the email, Whitey warns Betty that he intends to post it online, hoping to see "a public discussion begin about this kind of industry abuse of musicians". His message echoes comments by Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich on their decision to take down Atoms for Peace, Ultraísta and Thom Yorke solo albums from Spotify this summer, and David Byrne's recent claim that "the internet will suck all creative content out of the world".
Read the full email from Whitey below, or as originally posted on Facebook here.
Re: Whitey/stay on the outside/Betty – London
"I am sick to death of your hollow schtick, of the inevitable line 'unfortunately there's no budget for music', as if some fixed law of the universe handed you down a sad but immutable financial verdict preventing you from budgeting to pay for music. Your company set out the budget. So you have chosen to allocate no money for music. I get begging letters like this every week – from a booming, affluent global media industry.
Why is this? Let's look at who we both are.
I am a professional musician, who lives from his music. It took me half a lifetime to learn the skills, years to claw my way up the structure, to the point where a stranger like you will write to me. This music is my hard-earned property. I've licensed music to some of the biggest shows, brands, games and TV production companies on earth; from Breaking Bad to The Sopranos, from Coca-Cola to Visa, HBO to Rockstar Games.
Ask yourself – would you approach a creative or a director with a resume like that, and in one flippant sentence ask them to work for nothing? Of course not. Because your industry has a precedent of paying these people, of valuing their work.
Or would you walk into someone's home, eat from their bowl, and walk out smiling, saying, "So sorry, I've no budget for food"? Of course you would not. Because, culturally, we classify that as theft.
Yet the culturally ingrained disdain for the musician that riddles your profession leads you to fleece the music angle whenever possible. You will without question pay everyone connected to a shoot – from the caterer to the grip to the extra – even the cleaner who mopped your set and scrubbed the toilets after the shoot will get paid. The musician? Give him nothing.
Now let's look at you. A quick glance at your website reveals a variety of well-known, internationally syndicated reality programmes. You are a successful, financially solvent and globally recognised company with a string of hit shows. Working on multiple series in close co-operation with Channel 4, from a west London office, with a string of awards under your belt. You have real money; to pretend otherwise is an insult.
Yet you send me this shabby request – give me your property for free. Just give us what you own, we want it.
The answer is a resounding and permanent NO.I will now post this on my sites, forward this to several key online music sources and blogs, encourage people to reblog this. I want to see a public discussion begin about this kind of industry abuse of musicians … this was one email too far for me. Enough. I'm sick of you.
NJ White"
A Betty spokesperson said: "We use a collective licensing system that ensures both the recording artist and composer are paid. We apologise for any confusion and we have contacted the artist to clarify this. We would never use music without permission and going through the proper procedures."
by Guardian music via Music: Electronic music | theguardian.com
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