Salad Days – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 D.C. Punk Documentary ‘Salad Days’ Has A Piracy Problem http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-punk-documentary-salad-days-has-a-pirating-problem/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-punk-documentary-salad-days-has-a-pirating-problem/#comments Mon, 10 Aug 2015 22:17:28 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=55406 This post has been updated.

After making the rounds at film festivals and showings worldwide, D.C. punk-rock documentary Salad Days: A Decade of Punk in Washington DC is now available for purchase on Vimeo. But that’s just one of the many downloads floating around the Internet, according to director Scott Crawford. He says Salad Days has been stolen widely online before its formal release later this year.

“There have been multiple versions of the film posted all over torrents and YouTube,” emails Crawford, who used to edit Bandwidth. “Overseas even worse. Really bums me out.”

Crawford and director of photography Jim Saah (who both appeared on a Salad Days panel I moderated for NPR in May) began selling downloads of the film on Vimeo for 30 days starting Aug. 4. It comes out on DVD in September, followed by Hulu, On Demand and other services, Crawford says.

But in the months leading up to the film’s release, multiple cuts of Salad Days have popped up illegally online. Crawford says he started noticing them about two months ago. “The versions I saw were ones sent to film festivals as well other versions along the way,” Crawford writes. He says he doesn’t know how pirates got their hands on copies; he says it “could be anything.”

When I checked today, torrent search engines Kickass Torrents and The Pirate Bay yielded more links for Mac DeMarco‘s 2014 album Salad Days than links obviously related to Crawford and Saah’s documentary, but the torrent universe is vast, and not all files may be labeled accurately. The same could be said about YouTube. Update: Crawford says that the film’s distributor, MVD Entertainment Group, had the illegal links taken down.

Online pirating of music has been a hot-button issue since the dawn of file-sharing services like Napster. But music fans might not know as much about the impact of movie pirating. An Indiewire op-ed written by Ruth Vitale of anti-piracy group CreativeFuture and Alamo Drafthouse Cinema CEO Tim League says illegal downloading could be partially responsible for a recent decline in film releases.

“Whether you’re employed by a major studio or a do-it-yourself creator, if you’re involved in the making of TV or film, it’s safe to assume that piracy takes a big cut out of your business,” the op-ed says.

It doesn’t sound like Crawford expected a certain amount of pirating. When he first saw people illegitimately distributing his film, he says he “was pretty shocked, actually.”

Salad Days debuted in New York in 2014, later selling out a string of local showings at AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Spring, Maryland. It’s traveled extensively since then, screening in dozens of U.S. cities as well as Canada, Russia and Argentina. The documentary covers the early years of D.C.’s storied punk-rock scene, talking to musicians, venue operators, label owners and fans about the development and cultural impact of punk in the capital region.

Asked how pirating has affected his bottom line, Crawford writes, “[It’s] really hard to say.”

Crawford and Saah ran a successful Kickstarter campaign for Salad Days in 2012, raising nearly $55,000 to produce the documentary. But that hasn’t been enough for the filmmakers to break even, the director says.

Income from Salad Days is “not even close to covering the costs of the film,” Crawford writes.

The documentary Salad Days: A Decade of Punk in the Nation’s Capital is available on Vimeo for a limited time and on DVD starting Sept. 18.

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Come To A Screening of ‘Salad Days: A Decade of Punk in Washington, DC (1980-90)’ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/come-to-a-screening-of-salad-days-a-decade-of-punk-in-washington-dc-1980-90/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/come-to-a-screening-of-salad-days-a-decade-of-punk-in-washington-dc-1980-90/#respond Thu, 23 Apr 2015 11:55:43 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=51164 For a solid decade, Washington, D.C. was firmly on the map as the punk capital of the nation. During the 1980s, you could see Bad Brains, Minor Threat, Government Issue, Scream, Fugazi and Mission Impossible (featuring a 16-year-old Dave Grohl) in DIY spaces all over town. And what made it vital and game changing was that do-it-yourself ethos: no corporate anything, no major labels, just kids burning with energy, rage and creativity.

A new documentary film called Salad Days: A Decade of Punk in Washington, DC looks back at that scene. NPR Music will host a screening in, appropriately enough, the nation’s capital, and you’re invited. Salad Days captures an exciting time in this city by pulling together retrospective interviews with rare film footage from the days when harDCore punk was exploding. The film was made by Scott Crawford, a youngster back in those days who had a fanzine that covered those magical times.

Scott Crawford will be on hand after the screening to answer questions along with other panelists including Salad Days director of photography Jim Saah (who documented the scene as a photographer), musician Brian Baker (of Minor Threat, Bad Religion and Dag Nasty) and moderator Ally Schweitzer of WAMU.

The screening will take place on Tuesday, May 5 at 7:00 p.m. If you’d like to join us, go to this page to reserve your free ticket.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
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‘Salad Days’ Punk Documentary Unveils New Trailer, Premiere Date http://bandwidth.wamu.org/salad-days-punk-documentary-unveils-new-trailer-premiere-date/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/salad-days-punk-documentary-unveils-new-trailer-premiere-date/#comments Tue, 30 Sep 2014 16:06:45 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=40409 Update, Oct. 10: The film screens Dec. 19 at AFI Silver Theatre. Tickets sold out fast for the early showing; a second 10 p.m. showing has been added. Also, Soulside’s Dec. 20 show at Black Cat is sold out; a Dec. 21 show has been added.

Scott Crawford and Jim Saah’s documentary Salad Days: The DC Punk Revolution is just one of a few D.C. punk documentaries in the works, but it’s probably the best known: In 2012, Crawford (who used to write and edit for Bandwidth) and Saah launched a Kickstarter campaign to help pay for editing and other expenses, and it handily surpassed its $32,000 goal, grossing close to $55,000 with support from nearly 1,000 backers.

Now those supporters have a date to look forward to: Salad Days will premiere Dec. 19 at a D.C.-area venue to be announced, followed by a Dec. 20 show at Black Cat with back-in-the-day D.C. punk bands Soulside and Moss Icon. Show tickets go on sale this Friday, Oct. 3.

Watch the Salad Days trailer above.

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