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One of the key rules of rock & roll is there are some artists you can never count out -- no matter how many lame records they may make, no matter how misguided their career direction might seem, they always hold the promise that they'll jump back in the loop and deliver the goods again. Iggy Pop delivered a solid one-two punch (for the first time in a while) with Brick by Brick and American Caesar in 1990 and 1993, but after ten years and three major duds in a row (the uninspired Naughty Little Doggie and the strikingly faulty Avenue B and Beat 'Em Up), you just had to wonder if maybe the World's Forgotten Boy had finally lost the magic touch for good. Of course, Iggy's career had always offered plenty of opportunities for such thinking, and just as he had in the past, Iggy came back to shut down the disbelievers with a solid slice of prime rock & roll called Skull Ring. The big news is that, on four cuts, Skull Ring marks Pop's first studio collaboration with the Stooges since Raw Power in 1973, and thankfully Ron Asheton's gloriously primal guitar riffs sound as brilliant as ever, and mix with Iggy's bestial wail like gin and tonic; if "Little Electric Chair" and "Skull Ring" don't quite pick up where Fun House left off, they make it clear the monster that is the Stooges can still shake the Earth when they have a notion. If the rest of Skull Ring doesn't quite reach the same level of solar plexus impact as the Stooges cuts, Iggy flies high enough on the rock juice that this set blasts like an M-80 from start to finish; Iggy's road band, the Trolls, redeem themselves after their cringe-worthy debut on Beat 'Em Up, electro-punk diva Peaches proves she's just libidinous enough to keep up with Iggy (and they goad one another into truly glorious rudeness), Green Day back the godfather of punk with spunk, enthusiasm, and lots of energy, and even Sum 41 give as good as they get (which is a lot more than you might expect from them). Skull Ring doesn't always capture Iggy at his best as a lyricist, but here what he says isn't half as important as how he says it, and he hasn't sounded this right -- and had music this potent backing him up -- in a decade, and the result is a big, sweaty, high-octane rock & roll session from a guy who practically defined the form. Like I said, you can't ever count Iggy out, and Skull Ring demonstrates why. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
Two plead guilty in piracy ring
Pleas stem from last October's raid of massive CD manufacturing operation in both California and Texas, mostly of Latin music.
The largest bust of a CD/DVD piracy ring in US history yielded two guilty pleas today, according to the US Attorney's Office in Northern California.
The bust, which took place last October at 13 locations in both California and Texas, involved a massive network that was illegally manufacturing and distributing millions of pirated CDs and DVDs. The raid was dubbed "Operation Remaster" and "Operation Buccaneer" by law enforcement officials, who said at that time that they had seized more than 500,000 CDs and over one million CD inserts, along with thousands of DVDs and 3,300 "stampers"--the metal discs used to press multiple copies.
The raid led to the arrest of five people, three of whom--Ye Teng Wen and Hao He of Union City, Calif., and Yaobin Zhai of Fremont, Calif.--were indicted by a federal grand jury. The men were charged with conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement and traffic in counterfeit labels, criminal copyright infringement, trafficking in counterfeit labels, and aiding and abetting.
Law enforcement officials did not release the names of those that had pleaded guilty in the case today.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which represents the major record labels, said 85 percent of the counterfeit CDs seized in these operations were of the Latin genre.
"The value of this prosecution to the entire music community cannot be overstated," RIAA antipiracy chief Brad Buckles said in a statement. "This case involves mass quantities of commercially manufactured counterfeits that closely resemble authentic CDs. This kind of illegal product has the greatest potential for deceiving the consumer and replacing legitimate sales."