Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Home taping is killing music

Encyclopedia : H : HO : HOM : Home taping is killing music


The original logo.
Enlarge
The original logo.

"Home Taping is Killing Music" was the slogan of a 1980s anti-piracy campaign by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), a British music industry trade group. With the rise in cassette recorder popularity, the BPI feared that home taping would cause a decline in record sales. The logo, consisting of a skull and crossbones formed from the silhouette of a cassette, also included the words And it's illegal.

A former The Pirate Bay logo featuring the tape and bones.
Enlarge
A former The Pirate Bay logo featuring the tape and bones.

The slogan was often parodied, one example being the addendum and it's about time too!, used by Dutch anarcho-punk band The Ex. Another example was the early 1980s counter-slogan Home Taping is Skill in Music, referring to early mix-tapes, in some ways a precursor to sampling and remixes. The San Diego punk band Rocket from the Crypt sold t-shirts with the tape and bones and the words "Home taping is killing the music industry: killing ain't wron". In 1981 the Dead Kennedys printed "Home taping is killing big business profits. We left this side blank so you can help" on one side of In God We Trust, Inc., though ironically the tape stock they used didn't actually work with most consumer recorders. More recently, the pro-p2p file sharing group Downhill Battle has used the slogan "Home Taping is Killing the Music Industry, And It's Fun" on T-shirts, and the BitTorrent website ThePirateBay.org uses the logo of a pirate ship whose sails bear the "tape and bones."[link]

Black Metal band Venom's classic 1982 album Black Metal had some play with the logo. It read Home Taping is Killing Music, So Are Venom.

Similar rhetoric has continued; in 1982 Jack Valenti famously argued that the VCR would ruin the American film industry, and in 2005 Mitch Bainwol of the RIAA claimed that CD burning is hurting music sales.

"Home Taping's Killing Music" is also the title of a short song by Misty's Big Adventure, a band from Birmingham, which takes the implications of this slogan to their illogical conclusion.

In 2005, British DJ Zane Lowe toured around the country with the Home Taping Tour. The promotional materials for this tour bore the skull-and-bones logo.

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: