It has become a clear thing that in Nigeria we tend to abuse every privilege we receive. Just tell the man to take a step, he’ll be the next person jumping and this has become a way of life in our darling country, Nigeria.
Maybe someone
taught our leaders how to squander a little fraction of public fund. They tried
to see that it works and being Africans, we are mostly guided by some funny
proverbs, of which one of them is ‘Anything that is worth doing, is worth doing
well’.
Because
it is worth doing well, we have chosen to always go to the extreme in anything
we are doing be it good or bad.
The fact
that one man’s food is another man’s poison makes the scenario of bloggers
uploading artistes’ full album online very funny.
Some
upcoming artistes would wish for that opportunity when their entire work will
be flying around on the internet without spending a dime. I’m sure many of them
would never mind at all if that happened to them.
Before we nail
these bloggers on the cross of piracy let us make a list of wrongs we have
actually overlooked in the music industry.
DJ Mixtape
Till now
no one believes the reproduction of another person’s intellectual work without
permission is wrong. Artistes pay heavily for their songs to feature in such
mixtapes and there are cases of artistes paying close to one hundred thousand
Naira [N100,000] for Alaba mixtape.
These
artistes are all upcoming; they pay for their slots and the top artistes don’t
pay a dime because their songs are used to give the mixtape value.
If
someone violates one of your rights and you go home thanking God for it, why
complain for another right that is violated. If anyone wants to complain, let
him complain for everything. No wrong can be right because it is favouring
someone.
Paying for radio airplay
Is this
supposed to be? If the answer is no, who has ever complained about it? I once
read online when a certain artiste sued a radio station for playing his song
without permission.
Why one
station? Why not all the stations? Nigeria has to define wrongs in the music
industry. Maybe it is time for the Copyright Commission to come in and educate
us.
Upload of full album
This is
the sin at hand at the moment and if nothing is done to cub it, the music
industry will surely crumble.
The big
artistes have enjoyed massive support from bloggers when their singles dropped
and when the album is supposed to be in the market, bloggers bring it back
online.
Bloggers have
become the bridge between music lovers and the artistes. They still want to be
a good bridge and not one shaking like the Niger Bridge.
They
want to be the first to release any content online, they don’t want to leave
any stone unturned; this is the spirit of Nigerian bloggers, they want to be
the best in the world, working so hard that Americans will someday be visiting
Nigerians blogs to download their songs.
Inyanya,
Olamide and others have paid the price and now Phyno is the target. As long as
Nigeria media is concerned, internet does not exist; no one has ever been sued
for a content posted on the internet in Nigeria meaning bloggers seem untouchable.
They help you, they
bring you down, and artistes will have God to thank because no post on the internet
so far can reduce the amount of money they’ll be making from shows.
Although
it is a way of life for Nigerian bloggers to upload anything they see, going as
far as uploading the full album of artistes will never make anyone the best
blogger.
A
certain blogger said “What do you expect? When you have already released 12
singles out of a 20 track album, what is left?”
Another
said “I even bought the copy I ripped from, meaning I have patronized the
artiste”
These
are all excuses, to cover up for this wrong that will collapse our music
industry if not checked.
We all look at the
fame and success of today, forgetting there is something called tomorrow when
every artiste will be afraid of releasing an album because of what we have done
today.
Bloggers
should also understand that it is not yet a war against artistes because they
have done nothing to deserve the ill treatment of uploading their full album.
Full
album upload, is wrong and will never help the industry, but just like the true
picture of Nigeria, so many wrongs have not been addressed.
Change
must start somewhere, maybe someone [Copyright Commission], should step up and
educate us on this subject we are in dare need of it at the moment.
Chinedu
Hardy Nwadike is novelist, and blogger; he writes from Owerri Imo State, Nigeria.
chikisnow@yahoo.com, 08038704454, @hardynwa and pin:
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