NEGATIVLAND - These Guys Are From England and Who Gives a Shit
2001
(Bootleg issue -NOT a Negativland release)
"Seelard [sic] Records 021"
from Aquarius Records' mailing list, 9/2001
Way back in the 20th century, 1991 to be precise, media pranksters Negativland got themselves into a legal tussle with Island Records when they naively released a single on SST that covered U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" and revealed Casey Kasem to be a foulmouthed ogre, all on the same track! Both SST and Negativland were subsequently sued into submission. Copies of the original U2 cd can still be had for anywhere from $75 to $100 US for the disc and bootlegged copies have been floating around ever since the track was pulled. Rather than go further into that whole can of carnuba wax I'll just refer those who are unfamiliar with this mother of all fair use lawsuits to Negativland's thorough and entertaining book "Fair Use: The Story Of The Letter U And The Numeral 2" (still in print), a 288 page document of the entire court case and Negativland's subsequent legal troubles with Greg Ginn and SST.
Well now, here we are in a new millennium, on the ten year anniversary of the lawsuit. Sensing that maybe the industry's lawyers have lost their taste for such passe copyright issues in favor of the much tastier Napster and the whole peer-to-peer fiasco, the label "Seelard" (hmmm...) has stepped in to see the return of this classic piece of copyright infringement. As a bonus to this risque reissue, Seelard has included 9 extra tracks relating to the original single such as an excerpt from an Over The Edge (Negativland's Don Joyce's weekly radio show on KPFA) show from 1989 where the germination of the single began. One track is an edited version of the "Radio Edit" so that you *can* now safely play it on the radio -- all the nasty words have been covered up with a
cornucopia of sound effects. The seven remaining tracks on this disc
were taken from live performances by Negativland in 1990 (Knitting
Factory, NYC) and 1993 (Great American Music Hall, SF) and cover
Casey's "Long Distance Dedication" on up to material that wound up on
the cd that accompanied Negativland's book (see above). There's an
abundance of good material added to the fated single in these live
performances including numerous tapes referring to "U2" that Don
Joyce had picked up in the interim, plus some more serious audio
forays detailing Francis Gary Powers' fateful flight over the USSR in
a Lockheed U-2 spy plane. Diddley Shit!
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