File:UTFactoryBelt.ogg
Summary
[edit]20 second sample of "Factory Belt", performed and written by Uncle Tupelo. The song was produced by Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade and originally distributed by Rockville Records (Dutch East India Trading). Copyright currently held by Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar.
Licensing
[edit]- the sample is being used for commentary on the recording in question;
- the sample contributes significantly to the encyclopedia articles in which it is used (listed under the heading "File usage" below) in a way that cannot be duplicated by other forms of media;
- the sample is short in relation to the duration of the recorded track, and is of inferior quality to the original recording;
- no other samples from the same track are currently used in Wikipedia;
- there is no adequate free alternative available.
A more detailed fair use rationale should be provided by the user who uploaded this sample.
Any other uses of this sample, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. If you are the copyright holder of this sample and you feel that its use here does not fall under "fair use", please see Wikipedia:Copyright problems for information on how to proceed.
To the uploader: If this is a free, non-copyrighted audio recording, please post it to Wikimedia Commons instead.
This is a sound sample of a recording. Its use on Uncle Tupelo is claimed as fair use because:
- It is being used to accompany an educational article, as part of a historical and critical examination (this song exemplifies the band's start–stop song technique, which was influenced by the Minutemen)
- It is a short sample of a much longer recording
- It could not be used to replace the original commercial recording
- It is not replaceable with an uncopyrighted or freely-copyrighted sample of comparable educational value
This is a sound sample of a recording. Its use on No Depression (album) is claimed as fair use because:
- It is being used to accompany an educational article, as part of a historical and critical examination (this song exemplifies the band's start–stop song technique, which was influenced by the Minutemen)
- It is a short sample of a much longer recording
- It could not be used to replace the original commercial recording
- It is not replaceable with an uncopyrighted or freely-copyrighted sample of comparable educational value
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
| Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| current | 07:45, 8 December 2012 | 23 s (170 KB) | RenamedUser01302013 (talk | contribs) | Image reduced per request: NFC |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage
The following 2 pages use this file:
Transcode status
Update transcode status| Format | Bitrate | Download | Status | Encode time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP3 | 199 kbps | Completed 06:24, 25 December 2017 | 1.0 s |