A new album by artists including Kate Bush and Imogen Heap protesting proposed changes to AI copyright laws is the latest in a history of musicians using silence to protest unfair economic treatment.
Imogen Heap's 2005 track 'Headlock' is enjoying a resurgence thanks to a game called Mouthwashing plus a TikTok spike.
There's a long history of musicians using silence to protest unfair economic treatment.
"Not Like Us" spends a second week on top of the TikTok Billboard Top 50 for the chart posting Feb. 27. He extends his record ...
Kendrick Lamar's "Not Like Us" rules the TikTok Billboard Top 50 chart for a second week in a row, following his top-four ...
Yesterday, a group of 1,000 UK musicians, including popular artists such as Imogen Heap, Kate Bush and Annie Lennox, released ...
Artists including Kate Bush and Cat Stevens made an album of white noise in empty studios, protesting a U.K. proposal to give ...
One thousand musicians call for the UK to abandon a law change that would allow AI companies to train models on copyrighted ...
Kate Bush, Imogen Heap, Damon Albarn and hundreds of other UK musicians released a silent album on Tuesday, Feb. 25 to ...
Last week, the UK government proposed a new policy that would allow tech companies to use copyrighted works to train their artificial intelligence algorithms. Under the proposal, artists and companies ...
The U.K. government is pushing forward with plans to attract more AI companies to the region by changing copyright law. The ...
Kate Bush, Annie Lennox and composer Hans Zimmer are among those who oppose proposed U.K. law changes requiring artists to ...