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- The Grey Album - Wikipedia
Promotional artwork by Justin Hampton This was not used for the actual cover, but appeared on the Danger Mouse website
- DANGER MOUSE: THE GREY ALBUM, CONSIDERED (2004): Looking through a . . .
The Grey Album was far from the first such album – the Beastie Boys' '89 Paul's Boutique stands as a landmark of sampling – but by choosing two high-profile sources and a clever if somewhat obvious title, Danger Mouse was thrown into the frontline of a discussion about copyright
- Paul McCartney on the mythical Grey Album - Far Out Magazine
In 2004, a little-known producer named Brian Burton, who would later take on the alter ego ‘Danger Mouse’, unleashed an album into the ether that was not only daring but completely illegal
- The White Album Project | A Comprehensive Look At The Beatles Self . . .
Producer Danger Mouse took vocals from rapper Jay-Z’s The Black Album, mixed them with instrumentals from The Beatles known as The White Album, and came up with The Grey Album This art was not used for the actual cover but appeared on the Danger Mouse website Promotional artwork by Justin Hampton
- What Did Danger Mouse Do? The Grey Album and Musical . . . - JSTOR
This article uses The Grey Album, Danger Mouse’s 2004 mashup of Jay-Z’s Black Album with the Beatles’ “White Album,” to explore the ontological status of mashups, with a focus on determining what sort of creative work a mashup is
- DJ Dangermouses ‘Grey Album’ gets noticed - TODAY
He says the real intent of creating the “Grey Album” wasn’t to protest copyright laws, but to create a musical dialogue between fans
- Danger Mouses Grey Album, Mash-Ups, and the Age of Composition
Introspective listeners will recognize the album's dialogic structure, and some may even be moved to ask questions about the asymmetrical relations of power that saturate the evolution of popular music The Grey Album is not, however, only a history lesson--it is itself an act of resistance
- Jay-Z The Grey Album DJ Dangermouse - HipHopDX
In January 2004, Roc-A-Fella released Jay-Z's Black Album on wax, but this time it was a strictly accapella with no beats underneath Jay's tight lyrics But then EMI sent cease and desist orders
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