Get 3 audiobooks free with a 30-day Free Trial
Sign Up Free
Loading...
Welcome
Sign up
Login
Browse Books
Deals
VIP
Gifts
0
Loading...
Play Sample
Plunderphonics
Series:
Part of Genre: A 33 1/3 Series
Author:
Matthew Blackwell
Read by:
Sam Rushton
Read
Read
Own
Own
Unabridged Audiobook
Listen Free Now
Listen free with a 30-day free trial
Choose 2 bonus VIP books
Enjoy 10,000 always free books
Add to Cart - $27.00
Remove from Cart
Give as a gift
Ratings
Book
Narrator
Release Date
November 13, 2025
Duration
5 hours 52 minutes
Summary
Bloomsbury presents Plunderphonics by Matthew Blackwell, read by Sam Rushton.
Featuring interviews with John Oswald, Negativland, and others and drawing on a wealth of research on copyright and intellectual property, Plunderphonics explores the impact of a genre that made illegality a point of pride.
In Plunderphonics, Matthew Blackwell tells the story of a group of musicians who advocated for changes to the copyright system by deploying unlicensed samples in their recordings. The composer John Oswald, who coined the genre term “plunderphonics,” was threatened with legal action by the Canadian Recording Industry Association on behalf of Michael Jackson. The Bay Area group Negativland was sued by Island Records on behalf of U2 for their parody of the band. These artists attracted media attention to their cause in a bid to expand fair use protections. Later, the Australian band the Avalanches encountered the limitations of the music licensing system during the release of their debut album, having to drop several samples that could not be successfully cleared. Finally, American DJ and producer Girl Talk released a series of albums featuring hundreds of uncleared samples and successfully avoided lawsuits by publicly arguing a fair use defense.
This book narrates the conflicts between these artists and the recording industry. Blackwell places plunderphonics in the cultural contexts of postmodernism, Situationism, and culture jamming and analyzes responses to the genre from the media and the legal system. Along with histories of each artist, changes to American copyright law are tracked through important cases like Grand Upright v. Warner Bros. and Bridgeport v. Dimension Films. Though the legal terrain did not shift in the favor of plunderphonic musicians, they changed public perception of fair use and enabled more widespread sampling in underground music. C 2025 Matthew Blackwell|P 2025 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Browse By Category
Biography & Memoir
>
Arts & Entertainment
Plunderphonics
Author:
Matthew Blackwell
Read by:
Sam Rushton
Add to Cart - $27.00
Remove from Cart
Listen Free Now
Get any book plus
2 bonus VIP books
1 book added to cart
Plunderphonics...
Matthew Blackwell
Subtotal
$27.00
View Cart
Continue Browsing
~~title~~
Back
Next
~~carousel-body~~
~~book-title~~
~~author-single-string~~
~~tag-text~~
© Copyright 2011 - 2026 Storytel Audiobooks USA LLC. All Rights Reserved.