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by dfc
4484 days ago
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Terabytes of bootlegs that do not piss the bands off: https://archive.org/details/etree Short list of musicians granting permission to have bootlegs hosted on archive.org/etree: 311 Blues Traveler
Camper Van Beethoven Cowboy Junkies
Cracker Dark Star Orchestra
Death Cab for Cutie Derek Trucks Band
Disco Biscuits Donna the Buffalo
Drive-By Truckers Ekoostik Hookah
Elliott Smith Furthur
Grace Potter and the Nocturnals Grateful Dead
Guster Hank Williams III
Hot Buttered Rum Jack Johnson
John Butler Trio John Mayer
Keller Williams Little Feat
Live Music Archive Local H
Lotus Matisyahu
Matt Nathanson Max Creek
Michael Franti and Spearhead moe.
My Morning Jacket Of A Revolution
Perpetual Groove Phil Lesh and Friends
Radiators Railroad Earth
Ratdog Ryan Adams
Smashing Pumpkins Sound Tribe Sector 9
String Cheese Incident Tea Leaf Green
The Breakfast Umphreys McGee
Warren Zevon Ween
Yonder Mountain String Band
My personal favorite is Danny Schmidt, a singer songwriter rom TX/VA: https://archive.org/details/dannyschmidt2007-12-13.sbd.flacThe 4,700+ other artists: https://archive.org/browse.php?collection=etree&field=%2Fmet... 24bit flacs: https://archive.org/search.php?query=%28format%3A%2824Bit%20... |
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Many bands allow audience taping but I'm not aware of m?any that allow for commercial distribution of those recordings. If Spotify attempted to distribute those recordings against the bands' policies then it would probably piss off the bands.
That Danny Schmidt is pretty great stuff. You're right about Spotify's lack of content when it comes to stuff like this-- they have all his studio albums but are kind of weak when it comes to live stuff, they have one album. Archive.org definitely fills in this gap (I use it all the time for Dead shows).