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View Full Version : Status Ain't Hood: DJ Drama and Don Cannon Arrested on Some Bullsh*!


Roxie
01-18-2007, 05:13 PM
http://www.villagevoice.com/blogs/statusainthood/archives/2007/01/dj_drama_and_do.php


Fuck Fox News; I don't listen to y'all ass

Music writers like me have bashed the Recording Industry Association of America, a private-sector trade-group that represents big record labels, ever since it basically sued Napster out of existence and made all of our lives a little bit shittier. But the music industry went through a massive and unprecedented sales nosedive last year, mostly because of the decentralized file-sharing services that sprang up in Napster's wake. So maybe the RIAA was right to be paranoid that kids wouldn't buy albums when they could download them, though their tactic of suing individual downloaders certainly didn't do a whole lot to engender customer loyalty. The agents of the RIAA are working to keep the record industry alive, and technology has turned that into a huge job, especially when nobody can be quite certain where the legitimate side of the industry ends and where the illegal stuff begins. Last night, the RIAA sent SWAT teams to raid the studios of the DJ Drama and Don Cannon and to arrest the two mixtape DJs. Mixtapes have long occupied a sort of music-industry grey area: they grab unauthorized pieces of music from all over, but they do it to build buzz for rappers and producers, many of whom are already part of the major-label system and who absolutely need mixtape buzz to help them sell conventional albums. The music industry has long cooperated with mixtape DJs, but mixtapes probably aren't strictly legal, and I suppose it's possible to argue that they cut into legitimate album sales. So maybe the RIAA's clampdown on Drama and Cannon will look like a savvy move in a couple of years. I just can't imagine it.

On this local Atlanta Fox news report (http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail?contentId=2083928&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1), which music websites are already rightly lambasting as a piece of shitty one-sided fear-mongering journalism, an RIAA representative named Matthew Kilgo describes Drama and Cannon's studios and label headquarters as a massive counterfeiting operation, and one local cop says that it's "not uncommon" to find drugs and firearms in raids like this one, even though they didn't actually find any this time. The Fox people seem content just to parrot the line of bullshit that Kilgo feeds them, which is a huge problem in itself. But here's what amazes me about the story: Kilgo seems to believe all the bullshit himself. He seems incensed that criminals like Drama and Cannon would be so flagrant as to operate right out in the open, selling their counterfeit CDs on their website like it was legal. I don't know if Kilgo was the one who actually spearheaded the raid, but he seems totally unaware that he's messing with an integral part of the music industry, that Drama has a major-label deal and a Rolodex full of label contacts, that he's standing behind T.I. on the cover of this month's XXL. This raid is the first time the RIAA has gone directly after a big-name mixtape DJ, and they've gone after probably the single biggest name in that world. So maybe I'm just being naive here, but I don't think the raid represents a sea change in the music industry's tolerance of mixtapes, mostly because the music industry doesn't employ any evil masterminds smart enough to orchestrate a sweeping change in policy like that. More likely, it's just another example of the industry's staggering incompetence and disorganization, a case of the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing. My guess is that Kilgo and his boss heard about the mixtape trade somewhere and decided to lash out against it without bothering to figure out how much the major labels depend on those mixtapes. Either Kilgo is doing an amazing acting job in that news broadcast or he has no idea that he's fucking with the mechanics of his industry. The Fox broadcast clearly shows the cops boxing up and confiscating mixtapes, not bootleg albums, and I'm not sure Kilgo realizes there's a difference between the two.

I keep picturing Lyor Cohen and LA Reid slapping their foreheads in dismay when they hear about the raid. Virtually every major new rap star of the past couple of years has come out of the mixtape world. Drama was personally instrumental in creating a couple of those stars, T.I. and Young Jeezy. T.I. had the only big-selling rap album of last year, and the tapes he did with Drama were a huge part of the reason it was able to sell. Rap labels are desperate to get Drama to do their artists' tapes; my other big theory about the raid is that some record executive got mad that Drama wouldn't do a tape for his rapper and called in the raid as sour-grapes retaliation. Drama is also the only mixtape DJ whose tapes I'll buy on name alone. I don't think I'd be so upset about the RIAA raid if they'd arrested Mick Boogie or Big Mike instead. Drama builds mixtapes that flow as well as conventional albums. I had no reservations about listing his and Lil Wayne's Dedication 2 tape as one of my ten favorite albums of last year, and I know a few critics who included more than one Drama tape in their top tens. So they've managed to arrest a true artist, and they've arrested him specifically for practicing his art. A SWAT team has raided his offices, detained his employees, and confiscated all his shit, all because someone in the RIAA is either desperate with greed or laughably stupid. Either way, it's fucked up.

Drama and Cannon are going to be fine. They're being charged with racketeering, but I imagine that the recording equipment that the police confiscated in the raid will be enough to prove that they're not just bootlegging CDs. A half-decent lawyer should be able to get the charges dismissed, and they can afford a better-than-half-decent lawyer. Even if they're found guilty, I can't imagine they'll serve any prison time. They've got a major-label album coming out this year. Cannon runs the Aphiliates label, which now has its own deal, and he's also been doing a lot of producing lately. Drama is T.I.'s touring DJ. If the Atlanta police do destroy all the CDs they confiscated, it won't be more than a financial setback for them. If they'd had arrested Mick Boogie or Big Mike, maybe those arrests would be enough to force those guys into retirement. Mixtapes are a huge part of what Drama and Cannon do, but they've got a whole lot of other stuff going on. Even if the RIAA manages to completely shut down the mixtape trade, Drama and Cannon will keep working. Still, it's a travesty that Drama and Cannon should have to go through this bullshit ordeal at all. The music industry may be facing a disastrous year, but Drama and Cannon aren't the problem. The problem is that the record industry employs people dumb enough to demand the arrests of Drama and Cannon.
Voice review: Jon Caramanica on DJ Drama & Lil Wayne's Gangsta Grillz: Dedication (http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0607,caramanica,72130,22.html)


The RIAA messes up BIG TIME, AGAIN! I mean, besides their usual bungling of suing grandmothers and 12 year olds, mixing up addresses and generally making enemies of their consumers.

The first time the messed up was when they tried to sue a multi-millionare. (http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.08/start.html?pg=3)Seriously, when is this gonna change? It's as if they don't even know how their own damned market operates!!! Craziness.

Oh, btw, I saw the Fox 5 news report when it first aired and let me tell you, it was some bad work. You're supposed to show, not tell and stray away from sepculation...but at least they caught all that STUPID on tape.

Why would people, in the music biz, sell illegal cds? Not a smart business idea right? Wouldn't they be notorious and black listed by now?

And then they went on to say that bootlegging cd's goes "hand in hand" with other crimes. At that I did a double take. Seriously, wtf?
I'm sure they won't stop with the "related to other" crimes (which is clearly insuated, but never said to be drugs), so crazy.

While I'm mad at the whole RIAA using a fucking SWAT TEAM, the reporting is even worse! Are you kidding me? Goodness. I'm gonna have to change the whole scene.

EVERYONE (besides Metallica and Dr.Dre and Madonna) Hate them. With a firey burning passion. And you want to know something else?

There's this compnay called Big Champagne that reviews people's legal (and illegal) downloading habits. They sell this information to music companies. With this info, the companies try to plot their next step, introduce the next trend, etc..yada yada.
But you know what? I've been waiting for this. I'm slobbering over this moment for sure.

Kaji
01-18-2007, 07:25 PM
I'd be more willing to give this piece of news my attention if the author bothered to write it in anything resembling a professional matter. For that reason alone, I could frankly care less...The music industry will be what it will be, and chances are the hammer will never fall on any one of us in particular anyway. Things are already shifting in ways that are beyond their control, at this point it's just a matter of waiting for them to realize the savings that could be had by closing their manufacturing divisions.

RandomPasserby
01-18-2007, 08:04 PM
After timbaland stole Tempest's music, i don't mind RIIA busting some rappers/their supporters for piracy.

Roxie
01-18-2007, 11:34 PM
After timbaland stole Tempest's music, i don't mind RIIA busting some rappers/their supporters for piracy.

Did you read the article? They aren't pirating.
RIAA doesn't understand the difference between an artist/label sanctioned mixtape, which is an essential part of the hip-hop scene and a pirated cd.

Jetsetlemming
01-18-2007, 11:45 PM
I pirate shit all the time and I don't do drugs or have weapons lying around. *Shrug* :D

Whoever wrote the article needs to drop the crap about stressing on the local Fox affiliate's news show (as well as stop calling that Fox News). It's an evening news show for christ's sake. They're all the same, every one, but no, they want to try to make a comparison and connection between Fox and the RIAA and their policies. Painting Fox to be an extra special bad guy when this was absolutely nothing special on their part. All evening news shows would do the same sort of thing.
The whole thing to attempt to focus the piece on Fox instead of the RIAA like it should be really makes me un-sympathetic.
Plus I don't really listen to rap. :P

Roxie
01-18-2007, 11:53 PM
I pirate shit all the time and I don't do drugs or have weapons lying around. *Shrug* :D

Whoever wrote the article needs to drop the crap about stressing on the local Fox affiliate's news show (as well as stop calling that Fox News). It's an evening news show for christ's sake. They're all the same, every one Well, I don't know about local news stations being all the same (i've lived in metro atl all my life), but I saw the piece when it aired on tv and it was bad. I expect more from them. They're supposed to be profesh.

RoxFontaine
01-19-2007, 12:19 AM
After timbaland stole Tempest's music, i don't mind RIIA busting some rappers/their supporters for piracy.

:bored: I won't even get into this.

Jetsetlemming
01-19-2007, 12:28 AM
Well, I don't know about local news stations being all the same (i've lived in metro atl all my life), but I saw the piece when it aired on tv and it was bad. I expect more from them. They're supposed to be profesh.
I've yet to see any local news ever act close to professional. :| They're like, the amatuer team in training, hoping to get bumped up to a real national show. I see better work on PBS then the local news. :P
I've lived all over Pennsylvania and Delaware, as well as extended visits to New Jersey and Virginia, and all the local news shows were the same thing with different anchors (and local news stories, obviously, but they were all presented in the same format).

Angelyne
01-19-2007, 03:32 AM
Local news is awful. The last time I flipped past my local news channel, the big headline was that some woman was bit by a fox. The same channel also spent a week promoting a "story" about how to get cable deals from Comcast--paid advertisement, anyone? :bang:

And fuck the RIAA and the "guilty until proven innoncent" stance that they hold towards their customers.

CrazyAce86
01-19-2007, 05:24 AM
The longer the acronym, the lesser I trust it, and I'll leave it at that.

As for local news... The only news I've ever watching is NBC25 News out of Hagerstown, MD, and Channel 9 News out of DC. They've both been fine. NBC25 tends to be the best of Hagerstown, despite being small. And the one anchor for Channel 9 is Derek McGinty, and he's a pretty famous dude. I like him, at any rate.