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“Working At Working” (by Wayne Hancock)

Album Description

Released:April 21st, 2009
Length:00:05:18

"I want to jump the blues and make the hard times swing."

So opens Wayne The Train's new album, and it's a deft proclamation of his unwavering belief in the curative energy of juke joint swing.

Man, there ain't a problem that can't be salved by his brand of stripped down, intensely rhythmic amalgam of hillbilly, roadhouse blues, honky-tonk, rockabilly and hep-cat boogie. It's an infectious and unpretentious sound telling quotidian tales of driving your life away, throwing your money away, playing the slots and twisting one up with your friends, and rich with a strain of populism that shimmies all the way back to Jimmie Rodgers, one that makes the holes in your roof and holes in your shoes all part of our common humanity. It's all played with an old school musicianship and a stand-on-the-edge-of-the stage immediacy that rockets out of the speakers.

Yeah, Wayne might be a throwback, but his conviction and energy kick to the curb any preconceived notions about what that means. Just check out that fuzzed out James Burton-styled guitar solo on "Dog House Blues," the straight up stand-up bass breakdown on "Throwin' Away My Money" or the jazz inflected git runs on "Freight Train Boogie." Even when he sings on the hard times like "the rich folks call it recession, but the poor folks call it depression" in "Workin' at Workin'," this Austin, TX native does it with a big smile and keeps the dance floor full, calling out solos to crack players like a modern day Bob Wills. Hell, you can even dance to his murder ballads. Check out "Your Love and His Blood" and "Moving On #3" if you don't believe us.

Produced by long time collaborator Lloyd Maines (Joe Ely, Wilco, Uncle Tupelo, Dixie Chicks), Viper of Melody is a tick-tight organic affair full of first takes and a near telepathic interplay by the band. It's not surprising given that this band clocks in 200+ shows a year. If you live somewhere between Portland, Maine and Portland, Oregon, you're likely going to get a chance to see for yourself.

(From Bloodshot Records)

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Song

Track Info

Language
English
Bit Rate
256000
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This track appears in the following mixes:
UPLOADED:05/13/2009
LISTENS:2376
STARRED:6
COMMENTS:8
DOWNLOADS:1469
EMBED THIS TRACK:

User Comments

01
c6rm3n on 03/18/12 at 11:42PM
This is a lovely song. Unfortunately, beware that it may not actually be licensed under Creative Commons. I used this song in a video on YouTube, and Koch Entertainment has claimed copyright on my video. They rejected my dispute, in which I argued I legitimately used this material under Creative Commons.

They now control my video on YouTube and have placed ads on top of it. This is not my understanding of what using Creative Commons material allows.
02
c6rm3n on 03/18/12 at 11:47PM
My video which uses this song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-H5YXYpRW8s
03
BSHQ on 03/20/12 at 05:47PM
Hi --

I'm terribly sorry for this ... when we signed up for FMA years back, we were with a different distributor and YouTube videos weren't being monetized.
04
c6rm3n on 03/20/12 at 09:18PM
Thanks BSHQ for your comment! I'm still confused though :) Are you saying that this song is no longer Creative Commons? Please note that I was never making money off of this song on YouTube. Koch Entertainment now is making money, however (assuming anybody actually views this video and clicks on the ads :) )
05
jason on 03/20/12 at 09:56PM
Hey c6rm3n, just chiming in as I saw this comment in our homepages recent activity feed.

Looks like this track has CC's Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license. That means that it can be downloaded and shared on a strictly noncommercial basis following the terms of the license, but for commercial uses, or for "derivative works," all rights are reserved. A video is a derivative work. So you're lucky they didn't simply remove your video!
06
BSHQ on 03/20/12 at 10:06PM
Thanks, Jason.
07
c6rm3n on 03/20/12 at 10:21PM
Thanks Jason. I guess I still don't understand BSHQ's first comment (why the apology if there's no reason to apologize?).

I'm trying to get a clear answer on whether including an audio track in a video does indeed constitute a derivative work. Over on the CreativeCommons website, I see this:

"Under CC licenses, syncing music in timed-relation with a moving image is always considered an adaptation."

However, I'm not convinced that my video is really "syncing" or "in timed-relation". It's just a video with absolutely no relation to the audio. The audio was not modified.

If you have a reference to cite how my type of video constitutes a derivative work, please do share :)

Thanks.
08
c6rm3n on 03/20/12 at 10:47PM
Hmm, this page over at the CreativeCommons website seems to explain it a bit better:

http://creativecommons.org/legalmusicforvideos

So, I guess I've learned something today.

I've removed all the "blah blah" in my video's description complaining about the copyright claim.

This has been humbling and educational :)

And BSHQ, there's no reason to apologize since this is a legitimate claim! :)

I've had truly invalid claims before on videos with totally public domain content, and I've seen others on YouTube complaining about Koch Entertainment repeatedly claiming copyright on videos of them playing Mozart in their own living rooms. So I guess I was a bit quick to assume this was yet another bogus claim.

Have a nice day.
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