Thursday, April 1, 2010
Did It Leak? The Death of the Music Industry's Grim Reaper
I recognize that I'm over two and a half months late on this story, but I think it's a story that more should hear.
Albums leaking in advance of their release date has been a plague that spread throughout this last decade, and over the last couple years it can be assured that every notable album would be sure to hit the internet before it hit stores, the question was only if it would leak by days, weeks, or months.
At the forefront of this musical epidemic, was website diditleak.co.uk and twitter account @diditleak. For the last two years, "Did It Leak?" was sure to update and tell when any significant album of any genre had leaked to the internet, almost as soon as the leak itself had been uploaded. No other information was shared by "Did It Leak?", so how the people running the site discovered the links, and exactly who all was behind the website, was left in the dark. The twitter site had built up a modest almost 12,000 followers, and major labels viewed the website as a sort of grim reaper, a publicist for the band Brand New commented that "We watch it like hawks."
I personally found out about this site in the middle of last year, after I had been searching for some kind of central source for information about album leaks, I finally found what I was looking for. I checked the twitter from time to time, and there were always updates about new albums leaking on an average of every few days. I personally am usually pretty up-to-date on music and the internet, and I only beat "Did It Leak?" once, and only by about 90 minutes. I was ecstatic.
If you're wondering where I'm going with this, however, is that on January 4, 2010 there was this update "Vampire Weekend – Contra leaked, due out January 12th." and then there were never any more updates following that. I remember at first being shocked when the leak of the new Spoon album, Transference, was not mentioned by Did It Leak, which happened shortly after the Vampire Weekend leak. But as days turned into weeks turned into months, I continued to check back less and less often, as I was never met with any more updates after Vampire Weekend's album. It was only last night that my curiosity overcame me and I decided to google search to see if I could find out what happened to the site, thinking that maybe somehow the RIAA put a halt to the site (even though the site never did anything illegal because it never linked to the actual leaked files, only informed followers that the albums had leaked, allowing them to seek them out on their own)... This is the article I discovered about the story behind "Did It Leak?":
For two years, the Twitter account @diditleak was the secret weapon of online listeners and music critics alike. In real time, the account, which ultimately garnered over 11,500 followers, announced whenever a digital copy of a particularly desirable record first hit the Internet. For that it became a beloved resource of torrent-hungry music fans and writers angling for first listens. Using email tips and message-board-scouring alchemy, @diditleak seemed to know leaks better than anybody on Earth.
The feed's creator was Alan Carton, a then-21-year-old Vancouver film student who worked on the site in total anonymity. On January 5, @diditleak went dark. Its creator's name is only being revealed now because on January 16th, after a long hospital stay, Alan Carton died. He was 23. In his final days, Carton worked on @diditleak from his hospital bed, posting tips about the new Yeasayer record at a time when doctors were saying he could lapse into a coma at any minute. His story--as told by his mother Jennifer to Voice--is unlikely, to say the least.
When Alan was 18, he put off college to work as an electrician in his hometown of Edmonton, Alberta. At work, he'd drop his hammer into the loop of his overalls, where it would brush against a lump on his leg. He and his mother, Jennifer Carton, assumed that the bump was a cyst. But after six months of work, Carton got a biopsy result that indicated that the lump on his leg was sarcoma soft tissue cancer.
"Whatever" was Alan's first reaction. Canadian hero Terry Fox had jogged across the country after losing his leg to sarcoma. Carton, too, could overcome this. But a full MRI showed that Alan had six cancer spots on one lung and nine on the other. The ensuing eight-hour chemotherapy treatments left him drained and unemployed. In his boredom, Carton taught himself how to play guitar and keyboard with computer programs. He entered a MuchMusic music trivia contest and won a new dirtbike that he never got to ride.
After twelve months of radiation, the spots in his lung and the tumor in his leg were still present. Doctors removed 45% of the muscle in his leg, leaving him with a limp and a scar, though his friends didn't mind--Carton's crutches got them good seats at Oilers games. After further visits, the doctor pulled Alan and his mother aside. Carton's lung spots had grown but if the doctors operated, Alan would have nothing to breathe with, leaving a 20-year-old kid strapped to an oxygen mask forever. The doctor told Alan that they were thinking of surgery the following week, but had decided against it. Alan said, "Well I'm glad you're not because we're all going to Calgary for an outdoor concert." Everyone thought it would be best that Alan go out and enjoy the rest of his life.
While her son was in Calgary, Jennifer took a week off work and cried. "I thought, I can't live like this," she says. "I can't just sit here and wait for this boy to die." So instead, she and her son concocted a plan for Alan to live his dream of going to Vancouver Film School, where he wanted to study sound design. They put their home up for sale a month later, the pair made the 10-hour drive from Edmonton to Vancouver with their Shih Tzu, Snowee, talking the entire way. At college, Carton didn't tell anyone he had cancer--neither the admissions board nor his friends. Every ten weeks he would take a weekend flights back to Edmonton for doctor's appointments, returning to school early on Monday morning.
In 2007, halfway through his first semester, Carton started Did It Leak--which began life as a blog--with the goal of total anonymity. For a year, he didn't even tell his mother about the site. When he finally confessed, Jennifer asked how he knew that albums were leaking. He replied, "I just know. I can't tell you how I find out, I just know." He showed her a map of where his followers were coming from--Ireland, London, Japan, Australia, Spain. People were sending tips about leaked albums to his anonymous email account. Magazines like the Italian edition of Marie Claire and Canadian newspapers were hankering for interviews. According to Jennifer, his site was valuable enough to working critics that a writer from The Chicago Sun-Times contacted him for his leak-scouring secrets. Carton turned down interviews to help keep the mystery alive.
During his eleventh month of school, Carton began having trouble breathing: a tumor was growing over his windpipe. He finished up school rapidly, returned to Edmonton, and worked part time at a radio station. By the spring of 2008, his tumor had grown and was pushing up against his ribs. Carton was down to 90 pounds and required a hospital visit for dehydration. In the hospital, he got a headache, which the doctor told him was a brain tumor in his right lobe. That meant a seizure or coma could happen at any time. The tumor would have to be radiated immediately.
At the hospital, Carton saw the leak tips arriving on his phone and was clamoring for his laptop. "Oh my God! I gotta get on here, my followers will be wondering what I've got!" he said, according to his mother. He was admitted to the hospital on a Friday and was updating @diditleak by Sunday. "In the hospital, he always had his laptop with him and his cellphone," Jennifer remembers. "Alan would write while he was in bed. People write and say his 'company' was so cool. He said, 'Little do they know I'm just lying in the hospital here with cancer, just bored with nothing to do.'"
He told his mother that if a doctor informed her he was going to die, he'd prefer to remain oblivious--he wanted to go on living. After he got out of the hospital, he went on trips with his friends and mom to New York, California, and Ireland. He got a new tumor on his hip and after October never walked again. By December he was 85 pounds and barely hanging on, but Carton and @diditleak persevered. He fell out of his wheelchair and bloodied his head. He started getting confused, dizzy, antsy and agitated. He started saying things and he didn't know what they meant.
On January 5, Carton added his final post--a notification about the leak of the new Vampire Weekend, currently the number one album in the country. For weeks, he hadn't wanted to go to the hospital unless it was absolutely necessary, but now he looked up at his mother at 2 a.m. and said, "I think it's time." His lung had filled with fluid and his body was going into panic mode. The hospital filled him with morphine and drained his lung. On Saturday, January 16, Adam Carton passed away at the age of 23
Now @diditleak is quiet, stuck on January 5. "I'm sure he said to me Lily Allen sent an email to say that she checks his site," says Jennifer, who allows that it could've been any pop star, really. "He said, 'I wish these people would ask me when their albums were about to leak--I could tell them.'" This article was written by Christopher Weingarten and can be found here.
I originally started out writing my own description of that story, but I realized part way through that I couldn't do it without blatant plagiarism or I would have had to leave out too many details. I don't know about you, but this story really touched me. It's kind of strange in a way that a person that posed so much fear to all those in the music industry, ended up being the greatest victim. Rest in peace Alan Carton, you remind me a lot of me, except obviously much more talented with technology and more relevant than I could ever be. Peace.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Graphic Concepts
I quickly(ish) put these together in photoshop tonight. Charmaine Olivia's photo I've previously posted, is the centerpiece with the girl, mixed in with some random photographs I found through google image search. I didn't really have any goal/purpose/idea with what I was making, but this is what came out of it. I'm trying to think if I can use any of these for anything, or possibly make an extended version and turn it into a banner. If you're reading this and have any feedback (negative or positive) or ideas for me, please share them in the comment section below.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
NPSH and Christopher the Skateboarding Lizard
Wow, haha, the video above documents Seattle band Natalie Portman's Shaved Head and a lizard that they found, up until his accidental death.
"I promise you that I'll do something really good for like... a hundred lizards or more someday because of this" All too funny.
Girl On Fire (More Hipster Photos...)
These pictures all come from the Girl On Fire blog I stumbled across earlier this week. I looked back through the entire history of the blog, and these photos (as well as a couple others I didn't post) were the ones that stood out to me for whatever reason. I loved the set of pictures of the blonde with sunglasseses, which is apparently the sister of the girl writing the blog.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Straight Outta 206: Ryan Lewis
Meet Ryan Lewis: Seattle Hip-Hop's most affiliated star, you just don't know it yet. Mr. Lewis isn't a rapper, but he's possibly the most unique/creative producer out of Seattle. To get familiar with his music production, head over to his myspace where you can snag free downloads of his EP collaboration with Macklemore, "The VS. EP", and his album collaboration with Symmetry entitled "LP".
Here's one of my favorite songs produced by Ryan Lewis, this is off of the Macklemore x Ryan Lewis "VS EP":
Oh yeah, when' he's not pumping out fresh beats, Lewis is a photographer/designer. He's done photo shoots with Blue Scholars, Grieves, Macklemore, Grynch, and more. To quote P Smoov on Grieves' song "Lazt Kall": "shoot every rapper in Seattle, call me 'Ryan Lewis'". On the designing front, Lewis created album art for Grieves' debut album Irreversible as well as the covers for both the Macklemore and Symmetry collaborations with Lewis.
Here's a still taken by Ryan Lewis from the video shoot for Macklemore's "The Town" :
Update: Check out this video directed and scored by Ryan Lewis, starring Macklemore:
Monday, March 15, 2010
More from Charmaine Olivia
More from the artist that brought us the girl on the post (aka one of my favorite pictures I've seen. And the fact that there is a topless girl in the photo is probably only *half* responsible for this)
Charmaine Olivia briefly describes herself as a "Drawer, painter, tea-drinker, self-taught San Franciscan artist." I think I have a crush on her. UPDATE: I just found out that Charmaine is like ridiculously attractive. I definitely have a crush on her.
Check out more work from Charmaine Olivia at charmaineolivia.com
Charmaine Olivia briefly describes herself as a "Drawer, painter, tea-drinker, self-taught San Franciscan artist." I think I have a crush on her. UPDATE: I just found out that Charmaine is like ridiculously attractive. I definitely have a crush on her.
Check out more work from Charmaine Olivia at charmaineolivia.com
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Alt.
Just some random photos I've stumbled across semi-recently that stuck out to me. Thanks to Fecal Face's POTD for the photos!
Flobots- Survival Story
Jonny 5 & company are back on it with the release of the Flobots sophomore album, Survival Story. These alternative rock/indie-hip-hoppers made a name for themselves in 2008 with the release of their first album, Fight With Tools, and the breakout single "Handlebars". Most people I've talked to about the Flobots were not too impressed with them past a couple songs from their album... Well I loved them. From their aggressive political stances to their edgy cross-genre sound, their first album was a breath of fresh air into the indie rap genre (at least the limited indie rappers I knew about at the time, mainly the Blue Scholars who bored me). The second time around they've got a Beastie Boy producing their album, and a Rise Against feature on the album's lead single (a single I was very underwhelmed by, but it's growing on me... sort of). Overall, I didn't find the album to be as strong as the first, although more play time might change my opinion. However, the album still has a few strong standouts. If you were a fan of the first album, definitely check out Survival Story.
Here are two of my favorites from the album:
Saturday, March 13, 2010
A Softer World
"Alt Comics" is how I first described A Softer World to a friend of mine. It's a funny comic strip site, but with a photographer's flavor, rather than an illustrator. In their words: "A Softer World comics is a weird sad clown that lives under your bed. Except when he cries, the tears are blood. And when the clown coughs, the most adorable kitten in the world pops out of his mouth and loves you."
I'm still only about a quarter of the way through their collection, but here are some random ones I particularly enjoyed, check out more at asofterworld.com:
I'm still only about a quarter of the way through their collection, but here are some random ones I particularly enjoyed, check out more at asofterworld.com:
Thursday, March 11, 2010
"Just do it. do it. cause no does it better" (-Lupe)
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