[78-L] Was: Glantz and Raderman brewing up a storm Now: Worthless Hack^

Glen Richards glenster at 2multiples.com
Wed Feb 10 10:06:26 PST 2010


"grimriper2u" is a hack - many titles he/she/it posted to Internet
Archive are *not* public domain; he/she/it stripped my copyright notice
from files on my website and posted them as his/her/its own, *after*
incompetently re-sampling them.

Sorry for the rant, but I have no love for this person - because of
h/h/i actions, I've had to constantly fight with Internet Archive to
have the files removed. It's constant crap like this that has caused me
to stop creating new content for my website. It's taken the fun out of
what was an enjoyable hobby.

Glen

 On Wed, 10 Feb 2010 16:01:40 +0000 David
Lewis <uncledavelewis at hotmail.com> wrote:

> 
> http://www.archive.org/details/NathanGlantzOrchestra-AfterTheStorm
>  
> Just posted one fairly noisy side of Emerson 10743, which I have on
> an old tape, to the Internet Archive. I like this record because in
> the middle of this mawkish, rather foursquare dance tune they break
> into a rip-roaring chorus based on the "storm" from Rossini's William
> Tell Overture. Another section of the same storm was used to open Ted
> Lewis Popular Favorites, Columbia S-1. This was recorded a few months
> later, and I wonder if there is a connection -- perhaps Harry
> Raderman is present on the Glantz side and was the source of both
> ideas. There's a fair amount of Glantz on the Internet Archive.
> Although grimriper2u's constant "78 RPM record GRINDING noises have
> been reduced" tag gets on my nerves, he has posted a really good
> Glantz side, "Yiddische Charleston>"
> http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=Nathan%20Glantz%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio



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