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How Music Got Free: A Story of Obsession and Invention Kindle Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,270 ratings

Soon to be a Paramount+ docuseries, narrated by Method Man and produced by Marshall Mathers, LeBron James, and more

One of Billboard’s 100 Greatest Music Books of All Time

Finalist for the
Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize, and the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year

A
New York Times Editors’ Choice

ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST BOOKS:
The Washington Post The Financial Times • Slate • The Atlantic • Time • Forbes

“[
How Music Got Free] has the clear writing and brisk reportorial acumen of a Michael Lewis book.”—Dwight Garner, The New York Times

What happens when an entire generation commits the same crime?

How Music Got Free is a riveting story of obsession, music, crime, and money, featuring visionaries and criminals, moguls and tech-savvy teenagers. It’s about the greatest pirate in history, the most powerful executive in the music business, a revolutionary invention and an illegal website four times the size of the iTunes Music Store. 

Journalist Stephen Witt traces the secret history of digital music piracy, from the German audio engineers who invented the mp3, to a North Carolina compact-disc manufacturing plant where factory worker Dell Glover leaked nearly two thousand albums over the course of a decade, to the high-rises of midtown Manhattan where music executive Doug Morris cornered the global market on rap, and, finally, into the darkest recesses of the Internet.

Through these interwoven narratives, Witt has written a thrilling book that depicts the moment in history when ordinary life became forever entwined with the world online—when, suddenly, all the music ever recorded was available for free. In the page-turning tradition of writers like Michael Lewis and Lawrence Wright, Witt’s deeply reported first book introduces the unforgettable characters—inventors, executives, factory workers, and smugglers—who revolutionized an entire artform, and reveals for the first time the secret underworld of media pirates that transformed our digital lives.

An irresistible never-before-told story of greed, cunning, genius, and deceit,
How Music Got Free isn’t just a story of the music industry—it’s a must-read history of the Internet itself.
Read more Read less

Editorial Reviews

Review

“The richest explanation to date about how the arrival of the MP3 upended almost everything about how music is distributed, consumed and stored. It’s a story you may think you know, but Mr. Witt brings fresh reporting to bear, and complicates things in terrific ways. . . . [How Music Got Free] has the clear writing and brisk reportorial acumen of a Michael Lewis book.”
—Dwight Garner, The New York Times

“[W]hip-smart, superbly reported and indispensable.”
—The Washington Post

“Witt’s book is more than just a simple history — or defense — of file sharing, a development most people associate with Napster, but which, according to Witt, involved a much more wide-ranging—and fascinating—story.”
—The Seattle Times

“Brilliantly written. . . . Fascinating. . . . Highly entertaining. . . . Full of surprises.”
The Guardian

“An enthralling account of how technology has turned the music business upside down . . . This is a terrific, timely, informative book.”
—Nick Hornby, The Sunday Times (UK)

“Compelling . . . . An accomplished first book.”
The Economist

“Witt uncovers the largely untold stories of people like the German entrepreneurs who invented the mp3 file and Dell Glover, the compact disc factory worker who leaked some of the biggest albums of the aughts, leaving record label execs frustrated and scared.”
—Business Insider

“[Witt] organizes his narrative around alternating chapters that each focus on a separate protagonist: an engineer, an executive, and a criminal: Universal chairman Doug Morris and two nemeses Morris didn’t even know he had: German engineer Karlheinz Brandenburg, and music pirate Dell Glover, a Polygram/Universal employee at the Tennessee CD manufacturing plant.”
—The Daily Beast

How Music Got Free is the result of five years of tunnel-vision focus on the history of digital music.”
The Village Voice

“[A] fascinating account of the rise of music piracy. . . . An engrossing story. . . . The year's most important music book.
The Independent (UK)

“A virtuosic, briskly readable account of when the music industry was briefly, seemingly, brought to its knees. . . . There's a lot to learn from the music business' antagonistic relationship with the technology that defined it, and Witt lays it all out on the page.”
The Portland Mercury

“The story of how the Internet brought the imperious music business to its knees has never been told more succinctly and readably than it is here. . . .
How Music Got Free cries out for a movie treatment like The Social Network.”
—BookPage

“A riveting detective story . . . Witt’s exposé of the business of mainstream music will intrigue fans and critics of pop culture and anyone who has bought a compact disc, downloaded an MP3, or used a streaming music service.”
Library Journal

“A propulsive and fascinating portrait of the people who helped upend an industry and challenge how music and media are consumed.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Like Bond meets 28 Days Later . . . Witt tells a thrilling tale, with a cast of music biz bigwigs, painstaking German boffins, and pirates and petty thieves. Witt’s writing reminded me of all my favourite modern essayists: Remnick, Franzen and John Jeremiah Sullivan. I loved it.”
—Colin Greenwood, Radiohead

How Music Got Free is as much a story about greed, friendship, genius and stupidity as it is about music piracy. And it tells an amazing story of a part of the Internet (not to mention the criminal underground) that I took for granted. I burned through it--you will too.”
—Christian Rudder, author of Dataclysm

About the Author

Stephen Witt was born in New Hampshire in 1979 and raised in the Midwest. He graduated from the University of Chicago with a degree in mathematics in 2001. He spent the next six years playing the stock market, working for hedge funds in Chicago and New York. Following a two-year stint in East Africa working in economic development, he graduated from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism in 2011. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00OZ0TKL6
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books (June 16, 2015)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ June 16, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4581 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 296 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,270 ratings

About the author

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Stephen Richard Witt
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Stephen Witt was born in New Hampshire in 1979 and raised in the Midwest. He graduated from the University of Chicago with a degree in mathematics in 2001. He spent the next six years playing the stock market, working for hedge funds in Chicago and New York. Following a two-year stint in East Africa working in economic development, he graduated from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism in 2011. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
1,270 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2015
Thrilled to have received my copy of Stephen Witt's How Music Got Free in the post on its date of official publication, I made myself comfortable, put on a full pot of coffee, and eagerly dove in to what I anticipated would be a fast-favorite addition to my library.

The book quickly settles into an exciting rhythm - its chapters circling around the activities of key figures in the story of the music industry and of music piracy in the last thirty years. It begins with the struggle of Karlheinz Brandenburg to develop his MP3 audio compression format over twelve years of fine-tuning and a constant battle for acknowledgement by a fiercely competitive industry.

The action then jumps to a few seemingly inconsequential men working at the PolyGram compact disc manufacturing plant in North Carolina - an unsuspecting locale for the most pivotal characters in the end of an industry.

A chapter later, we are privy to private exchanges between the newly-appointed CEO of Warner Music and his fellow overseers of the empire. As the story unfolds, we follow these figures through label acquisitions and purges, through major shifts in industrial policy, through aimless crackdowns on "pirates" including the elderly, the deceased, and a 12-year-old girl who'd downloaded the theme song to Family Matters.

As these individual stories progress, the reader develops an in-depth perspective of the tumultuous end of an era for recorded music. The author offers an astoundingly detailed account of the lives and conversations between core members of the Rabid Neurosis warez group and their suppliers. The storytelling is exciting, calculated, and fast-paced. In elegant Hollywood style each chapter leaves one scene at a critical cliffhanger to pick up at a similar point of action from another of the sub-plots in the puzzle that was turn-of-the-century music.
I read the book, eyes wide from cover to cover, captured by every thrilling twist in the tale. What could have been a dry and drab account of compression algorithms and legalities is instead an action-packed saga of a dangerous underground organization where anonymity is critical and risk is always high.

The book also explores the advent of the iPod and the birth and death of numerous filesharing services like Kazaa, Grokster, Limewire, Bearshare, the rise and fall of TPB, as well as a few contemporary players I'd never expected to see named in print.

The ending is incredible satisfying, and even evokes a strong sense of emotion and empathy in the reader - yet another surprise I hadn't anticipated from a text on piracy. Witt's book is a fascinating read and adds a much-needed perspective to a story which is still being played out before our eyes. This is easily my favorite title of the year.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2017
When CDs first came out, the promise was “Perfect Sound Forever”. However, viewed differently, CDs were a “maximalist repository of irrelevant information, most of which was ignored by the human ear.”
Research into hearing showed inherent flaws that make it possible to record high-fidelity music with very small amounts of data. This is because the human auditory system discards most of the data anyway.
The other consequence of the reduced size needed for high-fidelity music, was that the whole process of pressing millions of compact discs and selling them through stores, could be avoided. It was possible to save everything you might wish to hear in a single electronic database that could be accessed as needed.
After decades of research into acoustic physics and human anatomy, it was now possible to combine these insights with basic principles of information theory and complex higher mathematics. In the mid-80s, at the Fraunhofer Society, (a German research organization,) the young and brilliant Karlheinz Brandenburg, was leading a team doing just this. Essentially, Brandenburg had produced a compression algorithm that would reduce the data requirement to one-twelfth the size of a CD, with no loss in the quality a person could hear.
In 1987, Fraunhofer committed to creating commercial products based on Brandenburg’s algorithm. The products would be able to be used to both stream and store music.
History has shown that universal standards are not always based on the best technology, but on the aggressiveness of the technology owners. This has been true for the AC/DC “Current Wars” of the late nineteenth century, and to the VHS-Betamax battle of the 1980s.
In five straight head-to-head competitions for the standards for digital FM radio, interactive CD-ROMs, Video Compact Disc (the predecessor to the DVD), Digital Audio Tape, and the soundtrack to over-the-air HDTV broadcasting, mp3 lost to its competitors. The regulatory committees in each of these categories favoured mp2 despite the fact that mp3 offered substantial improvements in audio quality.
At the opposite side of the music industry were those who recorded and produced the CDs. By 1994 their revenues had tripled to above $2 billion.
At the same time, the Fraunhofer team were attending industry trade shows across Europe and America to promote the mp3 standard. Philips was backing the mp2, and at the trade shows the mp2 booths were three times the size of those of mp3. Then an independently refereed head-to-head listening test between the mp2 and mp3, judged mp3 to be significantly better, again. This attracted two clients, Telos, the first enterprise-scale customer and the National Hockey League for whom the mp3 had been specifically calibrated to the sound of the fast action of the game.
In 1993 Intel had introduced its powerful new Pentium chips, the first processors capable of playing back an mp3 without stalling. The new generation of hard drives were coming out with what was then enormous storage capacity of nearly a gigabyte that could store almost 200 songs.
Other new technologies enabled consumers to create their own mp3 files, then play them from their home PCs. “January 20, 1995 (was) the official start date of the mp3 revolution in North America.”
AT&T and Thomson acted as the corporate sponsors of the mp3, and by late 1995 they had invested more than a million dollars in the project. With the file compression capability of the mp3, it was soon possible to download music directly over the Internet, and dispense with the compact disc entirely.
Mp3 had been the leading technology of its kind in the world, and was producing substantial earnings. The format war was over, mp3 had won. However, the mp3 was caught between a music industry that wouldn’t license the technology without a critical mass of mp3 players, and the electronics industry that wouldn’t manufacture the players without a critical mass of mp3 users.
Piracy had always been a problem for the music industry ever since people were able to duplicate audio cassettes and CDs. The ability to put music on websites and underground file servers across the world, led to an explosion of the number of mp3 files in existence. College students filled their hard drives filled to capacity with pirated mp3s.
The stellar earnings of the biggest recording companies in the world in the last part of the 20th century, were disrupted by Shawn Fanning, an 18-year-old Northeastern University dropout. He developed a new piece of software to up- and download pirated music using mp3, that he called Napster. Almost immediately, the freely available Napster became one of the most popular applications in software. By early 2000 there were almost twenty million users, and by mid-year over 14,000 songs were being downloaded every minute.
The Recording Industry Association of America’s CEO Hilary Rosen, understood the danger and the potential of digital technology. She privately pushed for Napster and the major labels to cut a deal, but the industry chose to “sue mp3 out of existence.” The industry won against Napster, but not against mp3, which continued to grow. The industry had won the wrong lawsuit.
Napster had made file sharing easy. Previously you could find apps on the internet, but they were difficult to use, limiting the number of participants. Using Napster, anyone could type the word “mp3” into Yahoo!, and have a hard drive full of pirated albums in minutes.
In late 2001, the success of the iPod caught everyone by surprise, including Apple. The firm had underestimated the volume of pirated mp3s available. Apple actively encouraged paid, legitimate downloading, but landed up making money from the illegal activities of Napster.
In 2002 the music industry’s losses were the largest in American history. Eventually, with little help from the recording industry, the iTunes Store was established to sell songs for 99 cents. As the iPod became ubiquitous, the mp3 was no longer seen as inferior to the compact disc, and iTunes produced a seamless Web sales experience. Steve Jobs promised the recording industry 70 cents of each dollar for every mp3 song downloaded.
By the end of 2010 the recording industry contracted to less than half its 2000 size. In 2012, North American sales of digital music surpassed sales of the compact disc. After 17 years of psychoacoustic chaos, only a third of the U.S. music industry’s income still came from physical album sales, and slightly more globally. In 2013, revenues from subscription and advertiser-supported streaming passed $1 billion for the first time. However, artists with millions of plays, only earned royalties in the hundreds of dollars.
“How music got free” – is a multifaceted tale with many winners (the consumers,) and many losers (the recording companies and the artists.) The book has been thoroughly researched, and is an enjoyable read.

Readability Light -+--- Serious
Insights High ---+- Low
Practical High ----+ Low

*Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on leadership and strategy and is the author of Strategy that Works.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome book.
Reviewed in Canada on July 31, 2021
Very very inciteful - it will be interesting to read an update 20 years from now as technology changes.
Dennis Schütze
5.0 out of 5 stars Spannend wie ein Thriller: MP3s, Leaks, Filesharing & Piraterei in der formativen Phase der digitalen Gesellschaft
Reviewed in Germany on February 22, 2017
Witt erklärt bereits in der Einleitung, dass er diese aufregenden Zeiten des medialen Wandels als junger Student und aktiver Filesharer selbst miterlebt hat. Jahre später hat er sich dann für die Protagonisten und deren Motivation interessiert und ist dem in intensiver und nicht immer einfacher Recherche nachgegangen. Er hat die spannende Erzählung auf verschiedene Blickwinkel verteilt um die Geschehnisse greifbarer zu machen. Zentrale Handlungsstränge sind die Geschichten der Figuren Karlheinz Brandenburg (Forscher am Erlanger Fraunhofer Institut und Entwickler des MP3-Formats), Bennie Lydell Glover (Mitarbeiter eines amerikanischen CD-Presswerks, aktiver Leaker und Filesharer) und Doug Morris (CEO diverser globaler Medienkonglomerate), dazu kommen passagenweise weitere Akteure wie Shawn Fanning (Napster), Alan Ellis (Oink) u.a.

Die Erzählung beginnt mit der Entwicklung des MP3-Formats und der langwierigen Entfaltung ihrer Wirkungskraft. Es werden die Umstände in damaligen Presswerken und das etablierte Geschäftsmodell der Musikindustrie beschrieben. Selbstverständlich spielen auch die ersten Sharingplattformen und herausragende Leaks eine tragende Rolle. Witt ist bestens informiert und schreibt kenntnisreich und eloquent. Es gelingt ihm auch trockene Materien, z.B. Laborversuche, Entwicklerkonferenzen und Patentrechtsverhandlungen wie einen spannenden Kriminalroman zu erzählen und im Grunde ist es zusammengenommen ja auch genau das. Immer wieder scheint er sich allerdings Details zu verlieren, zitiert Dialoge und nähere Umstände, die er nicht kennen kann und ganz offensichtlich geschmacksverstärkend hinzugefügt hat. Wesentliche Sachinformationen sind davon allerdings an keiner Stelle betroffen, somit bleibt er dem Stil der klassischen amerikanischen Non-Fictional Novel im Grunde treu. Witt hält die Chronologie der Handlung im wesentlichen ein, als zeitliche Marker dienen die diversen Leaks und bekannten VÖs von Rap-, Rock- und Popalben, die rückblickend taggenau datiert werden können. Zusätzlich zu den aufwändigen Interviews, werden auch Artikel aus Fachmagazinen und Protokolle von Gerichtsverhandlungen verwendet.

Gerade in der englischen Version braucht man Leser allerdings schon ein erweitertes Erkenntnisinteresse und einen langen Atem bzw. viel Sitzfleisch. Ausdauer wird jedoch belohnt, Witt leistet ganze Arbeit, das Ergebnis ist beeindruckend und es wäre nicht verwunderlich, wenn aus dieser literarischen Vorlage in nicht allzu ferner Zeit ein spannender Hollywoodfilm entstehen würde würde.

Der Autor lässt tief Blicken in die medialen und technischen Bedingungen der beschriebenen frühdigitalen Ära, hält sich aber mit Bewertungen und Urteilen auffällig zurück. Das mag daran liegen, dass er wie erwähnt selbst als Filesharer aktiv war. Es wird aus der Geschichte aber auch deutlich, dass der Ablauf in seiner Konsequenz historisch unvermeidlich war und daher eine Aburteilung der Aktivitäten Einzelner billig wäre und dem Thema nicht gerecht werden würde. Dieselben Unternehmen die digitale Kopien von gepressten CD-Alben verhindern wollten, verkauften ihren Kunden auch CD-Brenner und Rohlinge, dieselben Unternehmen, die Internetverbindungen anboten, wollten den Kunden den Austausch von Daten über digitale Netzwerke verbieten. Computer-Nutzer zahlten verdeckte Lizenzen für Codierprogramme und sollten gleichzeitig durch Blockadesperren daran gehindert werden bezahlte, eigene CDs auf ihren Rechner zu ziehen, zu komprimieren und/oder auf mobilen Playern zu nutzen.

Die spätere Erfindung von iPod, Downloadportalen, Smartphones und Streaming zeigt wie hoffnungslos dieser Kampf gewesen ist und welche Potentiale die Vertreter der großen Medienunternehmen nicht erkannten oder lange Zeit nicht kommerziell nutzbar konnten, stattdessen wurde die eigene Kundschaft kriminalisiert ohne ihnen eine funktionierende, kommerzielle Alternative zu bieten. So gesehen waren die Piraten der ersten Stunde wegweisende Pioniere, die etliche technische Entwicklungen erstmals konsequent anwendeten und so die Vorteile der Digitalisierung selbst noch dem letzten, minderjährigem Nutzer vor Augen führten. Hat nur etwas gedauert bis die Industrie das kapierte, nachzog und wieder Profit daraus ziehen konnte. Die gesamte Medienlandschaft und die Art des Musikkonsums hat sich im Zuge diese Entwicklung unumkehrbar verändert.

Eine nachvollziehbare Erzählung dieser bedeutsamen Geschichte war überfällig und hat einen hohen Lehr- und Unterhaltungswert. Interessant daran ist vor allem, dass es anders war, als man erwartet hätte bzw. als das Narrativ der Unterhaltungsindustrie es gegenüber den Endverbrauchern dargestellt hat („Copy kills Music“). Die großen Player standen der Entwicklung vorwiegend im Weg, maßgeblich angetrieben wurde sie von einer handvoll spleeniger Einzelkämpfer, die sich zum allergrößten Teil nicht einmal persönlich kannten: Sie sind die ‚Unsung Heroes of the Digital Revolution’.

Fazit: Ein sehr anregendes Buch über ein entscheidendes Stück Mediengeschichte, deren Auswirkungen wohl so gut wie jeden betreffen. Empfehlenswert für Medienhistoriker, Kulturwissenschaftler, Musikforscher, genaugenommen eigentlich für jeden der Ohren hat zu hören.
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Mohit Bhatia
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for internet history lovers
Reviewed in India on May 23, 2016
An amazing book telling the story of how Music Industry evolved covering the 90s and 2000s from different povs.. Briefly explores what is wrong and what is right when it comes to sharing on the internet but remains objective
Gregory
5.0 out of 5 stars Well documented and fascinating book
Reviewed in France on January 1, 2016
I consider this book as an achievement, as it mixes several good things. Writing: this book is written like a thriller and once you've started, it's difficult to put it down. Industry perspective: this book gives you a good overview of the changes that have impacted the music industry over the last decades. Technical perspective: this book provides simple and clear explanations about music compression and its challenges. It explains the competition between music compression formats (MPEG 2 vs. MP3).

However, what I consider as the major achievement of this book is its account of music piracy networks, and especially The Scene and Rabid Neurosis. The author breaks the myth that music piracy was a widespread phenomenon and evidences the fact that most of it has been done by one man (an article published in April 2015 in The Guardian call this man "the man who destructed the music industry"). It's incredible to discover how those pirates were able to download CDs even before they were released in shops.

A great book, worth reading, especially if you enjoy music.
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silviosav
5.0 out of 5 stars How few people can change an industry from the bottom
Reviewed in Italy on October 25, 2015
It's a wonderful book which gives you a clear view on one of the biggest revolution of our history from three point of view, that of an inventor, that of a bootlegger and that of a manager. This is where all it began but everyone took a part unconsciously, and you like me could find yourself in some part of it. It's not something only disruptive like it could seem, but it's even a tech revolution, a new way of listening music and a new way to start a revolution from the bottom, from the net, like many of our days. In my opinion it proves that when something works and it's better for everyone, there's no business, no lost recognition, which can stop the change, and for everyone else who have lived in an old way there's just one way to survive, follow the flow and re-invent yourself!

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