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Thursday, 26 February, 2004, 12:51 GMT

Beatles remix was 'art project'

DJ Danger Mouse DJ Danger Mouse, whose Beatles remix album was blocked by record label EMI, has said he never intended to break copyright laws.

The producer mixed The Beatles' White Album with rapper Jay-Z's Black Album to make The Grey Album as a small underground "art project".

Danger Mouse said he wanted to prove "such radical things can really work".

But the Beatles' label has told the DJ and record shops to stop selling the album, which uses unauthorised samples.

"I intended for it to be for friends and for people who knew my stuff. I figured it would get passed around, and it would be this little underground thing, but it kind of took off on its own," said Danger Mouse, whose real name is Brian Burton.

Jay-Z's label, Roc-a-fella Records, did not take any action against Danger Mouse.

Damon Dash, head of Roc-a-fella, said proper permission should have been obtained but added: "I think it's hot. It's the Beatles. It's two great legends together."

Music activism site downhillbattle.org urged fans to put The Grey Album on websites for 24 hours on Tuesday to protest against EMI's block on the record.



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Related to this story:
Beatles remix web protest (24 Feb 04  |  Entertainment )
EMI blocks Beatles album remix (16 Feb 04  |  Entertainment )
US court battle over BBC sessions (06 Feb 04  |  Entertainment )
Beatles sue Apple over iTunes (13 Sep 03  |  Entertainment )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
DJ Danger Mouse
The Beatles profile
The Beatles in Liverpool
The Beatles
EMI Group
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