in a nightclub with a
slipmat having the imprint
Vinyl kills the mp3 industry. (2014) The slogan was often parodied, one example being the addendum ''and it's about time too!
, used by Dutch anarcho-punk band the Ex. Some fanzines changed the words from Home taping is killing the music industry
and added the words ...so be sure to do your part!
below the logo. Another example was the early 1980s counter-slogan Home Taping is Skill in Music
, referring to early mixtapes, a precursor to sampling and remixes. The cassette & crossbones image was displayed briefly as a backdrop in the "Time Out for Fun" video by the band Devo from their 1982 album, Oh, No! It's Devo''.
Venom's 1982 album
Black Metal used the logo with the words
Home Taping Is Killing Music; So Are Venom. The phrase
Home-Taping Is Making Music appears on the back cover of Peter Principle's self-produced 1988 album
Tone Poems. The American 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 Wrong."
Sonic Youth has T-shirts with the cassette and "Sonic Youth" written under it. The cover of
Billy Bragg's album
Workers Playtime featured a notice reading "
Capitalism is killing music – pay no more than £4.99 for this record".
Mitch Benn also comments "Home taping isn't killing music, music's dying of natural causes" in the song "Steal This Song" on the album
Radioface. In Poland during the mid-1980s, some (PRONIT label) vinyl pressings of certain albums contained a parody stamp labeled "Home taping... is much fun". One cassette version of the
Dead Kennedys e.p.
In God We Trust Inc. had a blank side, printed with the message "Home taping is killing record industry profits! We left this side blank so you can help." During the 1980s, rock group
the Beat sold blank cassette tapes as merchandise at their live shows. The band frequently encouraged fans and concert patrons to record their live performances instead of illegally copying their studio albums. The group's leader,
Paul Collins, believed this practice would satisfy a need for instant gratification while preventing the sales of their albums from diminishing.
La Route du Rock biannual music festival in France uses the tape image as part of the event's logo. logo with cassette and crossbones Later, 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
The Pirate Bay uses the logo of a pirate ship whose sails bear the "tape and bones." Additionally the
Pirate Party UK has a version of the tape and bones with the logo "copyright is killing music – and it's legal" and the Swedish
Piratbyrån is using the same tape and bones as their logo. Similar rhetoric has continued; in 1982
Jack Valenti famously compared the
VCR and its
anticipated effect on the movie industry to the
Boston Strangler, and in 2005
Mitch Bainwol of the
RIAA claimed that
CD burning is hurting music sales. In March 2010,
TalkTalk, as part of its campaign against the UK Government's filesharing proposals, created a spoof video entitled "Home Taping is Killing Music". The song was written and performed by singer/songwriter
Dan Bull and featured
lookalikes of
Madonna,
George Michael and
Adam Ant lip-synching to the song. == See also ==