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- Depeche Mode
Oddly enough, Playing The Angel is a return to form for Depeche Mode, even though it may well be argued that they never truly deviated from their roots in their more recent offerings. In the
- Belle & Sebastian
The Life Pursuit is a sort of Reeses Peanut Butter Cup. You get Belle & Sebastian's peanut butter (its wistful, often irresistible pop) dipped in a 'Have A Nice Day!' and glam 70s chocol
Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
- Arctic Monkeys
Get on your dancing shoes
You sexy little swine
-Arctic
- Massive Attack
"Black Milk" knocks me off my feet in this collection of moody and eclectic songs. Massive Attack uses samples and keyboards in a very unique way, but not all the songs pack the same punch.
- Poe
Dropping like a bomb on some of the blah musical offerings of her contemporaries, Haunted was one of the best albums of 2000, obliterating the competition.
Ostensibly a tie-in to her brot
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News
Japan Drops "iPod tax" Plan
Wednesday, November 30th, 2005 at 2:00 PM - by Jeff Gamet
Japan's Cultural Agency has decided not to implement a copyright law that would add a royalty fee to digital music players. The government chose to drop the proposed fee, or "iPod tax," because it couldn't determine a way to enforce violations, according to the Seattle Post Intelligencer.
Recording companies were pressuring the Japanese government to modify the current system that adds a 3 percent charge to the wholesale price of recording devices and other equipment that can duplicate copyrighted material. They wanted hard drive and Flash-memory based players, like the iPod product line, to be included, too.
The fee would have gone to the recording companies, who in turn would have distributed a portion to artists and composers. Apple had no comment on Japan's decision.
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