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De la soul gave away pirated copies of their own music


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Legendary hip-hop group De La Soul celebrated the 25th anniversary of their landmark album 3 Feet High and Rising by giving most of their music away for free this past weekend. Since you can't legally obtain most of the act's music online it was a great gesture, made especially intriguing by the discovery that the copies handed out came from a pirate source.

In a decade spilling over with heavy aggressive gangsta rap from the likes of N.W.A, the birth of De La Soul in 1987 was a much needed breath of light fresh air.

Two years later the trio’s debut album 3 Feet High and Rising was making waves and a quarter of a century on its magnificence hasn’t diminished one bit – if you can get to hear it.

Trouble is, unless you have it on some old-skool format (I have my vinyl here), you can’t obtain it legally online. It’s a complex story of the band’s undoubted sampling prowess and refreshingly ‘liberal’ approach to copyright, followed by a licensing nightmare that not even two decades and a half of negotiations could put to rest.

This past weekend, however, De La Soul had a rather special gift for their fans. To celebrate 25 years since the launch of 3 Feet High, the band dropped the album and their entire back catalog on WeAreDeLaSoul.com, a site set up on Valentine’s day to spread the love to fans old and new.

This musical free-for-all was great publicity for the band (who have new album coming out later this year) and a golden opportunity for people who wanted to get their hands on gems such as The Magic Number, Say No Go, and my personal favorite Ghetto Thang, without having to resort to obtaining the music from pirate sources.

On that front, however, there’s both good and bad news.

Yes, De La Soul delivered on the music front, handing over the tunes in exchange for the downloader’s email address, but those hoping to get tracks untainted by piracy will be disappointed. As first spotted by Recode, it seems De La Soul had a bit of a problem obtaining ‘official’ digital copies.

Text revealed in the metadata on the 3 Feet High MP3s appears to show that De La Soul (or someone close to them) downloaded the copies from Russian pirate site Rappalata before making them available on their own site.

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