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I have to admit I have a little trouble feeling sympathy for Negativland or the hip-hop community claiming their creativity is being squelched by people wanting to be paid for work they are sampling. It seems to me that if you are a scavenger sifting through recorded history looking for things that will have resonance you would be somewhat aware that there is a debt to be paid to those who originated the work since you are dependent upon them. To meet their demands before using it doesn't seem like much to ask. If you can meet that demand, great. If you can't, move on. To cry "repression" here to me is childish in the extreme. Is sampling valid in music? Of course, I would agree that it is. But if you need to sample a Robert Plant screech from a Zeppelin song, then heavily process it, run it backwards, etc. until it's unrecognizable (thereby putting you in the clear from owing them anything), to me it begs the question: why not just screech into a mic for your damn self then? If the Zeppelin screech carries with it such significant mojo that even sliced & diced beyond recognition it's something you have to have, then Zeppelin deserves to be justly credited and/or compensated for their mojo. I'll go one step further: this is not something you should wait to do until a team of Zeppelin lawyers comes to your door (frightening bunch, I'm sure). In the question of Fripp's appropriating the work of Hendrix and Holst, I read a story once years ago about how Keith Emerson pays a share of the publishing to the owners of Bela Bartok's estate for deliberately stealing from a piece of his. Emerson didn't contest it and has complied ever since. Bartok still doesn't get a writing credit but the money is going where it should. Fripp may or may not be in a similar situation with the Holst estate. You may find a way to use it legally against the creator's wishes. How someone could do that and keep a clear conscience is a bit beyond me. This is not a legal argument I'm making but a moral one. I seriously, seriously question the integrity of someone who can't take an ethical stand on an issue independent of a legal one. ken R