Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Fundamental honesty and Audio A


I’m going to leave the band name out of this story.  I’m 99% sure I remember it correctly, but since I can’t find the original source, I don’t want to risk the error.

Probably close to 20 years ago, I saw a story about some of the old vocal groups from the 50s and 60s who have had their names taken from them and given to other people.  The story focused on one band in particular who actually sued in order to be able to perform under the name that they had created decades before, and they lost.  See, at the time, copyrights and trademarks were owned by the management companies or record companies, and the bands themselves didn’t always (or even usually) own their own songs and name.  So when they broke up, the trademark was eventually sold to someone else, and that person put together a group of completely different people and toured them as though they were the original group.

My understanding is that things have improved for artists greatly since then, but then again, it wasn’t too long ago when Prince had to forgo using his birth name (his actual name is Prince – that’s not a stage name) and had to use a symbol because his record company “owned” the name his mother gave him.  So maybe we still have a little ways to go. 

The above situation is so clearly dishonest and wrong that it doesn’t even need explaining.  You have someone masquerading as someone else for profit.  That’s lying, that’s fraud, and that’s sin.  Whether or not it is legal, it’s still sin.

Other situations fall somewhere in between, and it takes a little more examination to know whether they are wrong or not.  I’m a longtime Smashing Pumpkins fan, and it doesn’t at all bother me that Billy Corgan is the only member left.  He had always been 80% of the Pumpkin sound anyway, with Jimmy Chamberlain providing the other 20%, so the driving force of the band is the same.  It’s essentially the same band.

I saw the Temptations several years back, and when I say that, I really mean I saw the only surviving member of the classic lineup with newer guys.  I think I’m okay with that too – that’s as much of the group as we’re going to see, after all, so the band is really his to do with as he wills.  At the same time though, would I be okay if Ringo started touring as “the Beatles” in a few years if Paul were to die first?

What about Newsboys?  This is an interesting one.  When I met the Newsboys several years back, I asked them to sign their latest album, but I asked Peter to sign Hell is for Wimps, because it was the first of their releases that I ever got, as well as the first CD I ever got (along with two others when I got a CD player for Christmas).  Peter was the only remaining member of that old lineup, but I was okay with that, because, again, Peter was always the driving force of the band.  But when he left and was replaced, I really started to feel like the band should rename itself.  Yes, the other guys (besides Michael Tait) had been with the band for a long time, and so it was almost like they were just replacing a singer, but at the same time, those guys had not done as much (it seems to me, at least) to define the sound of the Newsboys like Peter had.

We could go on, but the real point is that a band name means something, and we need to recognize that.  As Christians, we have a responsibility for honesty, and we really need to think through if we are being honest when we identify ourselves as being a particular group.  If I told you that I play guitar for the Beatles, you would understand that I am being dishonest.  And I would still be dishonest if I actually did have a band that called itself “the Beatles,” because there is a meaning behind that band name that I am trying to skirt around when I claim to be part of it.  It doesn’t really matter that I am actually a member of something called “the Beatles,” it’s not the Beatles.  That name has a meaning, and I’m trying to change the meaning of the name itself.

Which brings us to Audio Adrenaline.  An all-new lineup was recently announced, even though the last album had been an almost all-new lineup (only the bassist remained from the old band).  Seemingly, the only thing tying this new band to the old one is the approval of Mark Stuart, the original singer, who also co-wrote one of the songs.

Does he have the legal right to declare that this group of people is Audio A?  Probably so.  I’m not a trademark attorney, but no one is challenging that yet, so we’ll assume for now that he does.  Should he?

Is it honest to say that this group of guys is Audio A?

Let me ask it this way – if Paul McCartney heard about my garage band called the Beatles, kinda liked the idea, and cowrote a song with me, would that make us the Beatles?

No, it wouldn’t.

When I saw Audio A in their farewell tour, one of the things that really impressed me is the willingness of the band members to let this thing go when Mark Stuart had to step down.  I totally wanted the rest of the band to form a new group and keep going, but I wanted it to be a new group, and not Audio A.  Stuart had been too important to Audio A to pretend that nothing had changed.  They didn’t form a new band, but they also didn’t pretend to be something they no longer were, even though Mark had sung very little in the last couple of albums due to his voice starting to be lost.  He was so central to that band that it would have been different.

And I didn’t think it was very honest when the band reformed with only the bassist remaining from the old days.  Will McGinnis wasn’t the driving force behind their sound.

All that has changed, and I’m not going to speculate as to the motives of that change.  Today, “Audio A” is apparently whoever is recording under that name, and it will probably be different tomorrow.  It is a brand that will make the unsuspecting grab the album, thinking about some great jams from the 90s, but not realizing that this Audio A isn’t at all that Audio A.


As Christians, we are called to better.