The Gauntlet Accuses Sumerian Founder of Warez Involvement, Avildsen Responds: ‘I Was 13’

by | Apr 13, 2011

Weeks after Sumerian Records founder Ash Avildsen launched a YouTube video speaking out on music piracy, TheGauntlet.com has accused Avildsen of being a member of warez groups in the mid-90’s.

“What Ash doesn’t tell you is that when he was in high school, we ran in the same circles, the software piracy/hacking circles,” The Gauntlet’s Jason Fisher wrote in an editorial. “The quick background version is he gained control of a release group called Release on Rampage which folded, he later started another release group called Reflux (which later became the name of the band he fronted). Both groups sole purpose was pirating video games and spreading the games to as many places before they hit store shelves, sound familiar?”

Fisher added, “People can grow and change and this includes viewpoints, but what I think Ash fails to point out in his post is that he was once one of these people with no regards for the companies that spent millions of dollars on a product to have some kid give it away for free.”

Avildsen responded today to the accusations, “Congratulations on bringing traffic to your site by exploiting my name and childhood. I like the House of Blues Ad you have there next to my name. Yes, from ages 11-15 in the days of dial-up modems, BBS and IRC, before cell phones and websites, I pirated PC video games. I also stole cigarettes from convenience stores when I was 13, but later realized smoking cigarettes were bad for my health and that stealing is stupid. Care to do an article on that?”

“Regardless, I am not 13 years old anymore and I do not condone stealing… Good to hear from you dude, even if it’s by this. You live in California, don’t be a stranger.”

Avildsen’s anti-piracy video follows:

Ontronik Interview: Ex-System of a Down Drummer Returns

If you want to hear a crazy rock story, meet Andy Khachaturian. He was original drummer for System Of A Down and frontman for the now defunct Armenian-American quartet The Apex Theory — ever wonder what happened to those guys? If you were born after 1990, you...

This Is Hell Interview: The New Material, Soldiers, & Stories from the Road

This Is Hell bassist Pieter Vandenberg insists that last fall’s run supporting Bring Me The Horizon and August Burns Red wasn’t just any kind of tour — it was a rock spectacle. “[Vocalist Travis Reilly] would get up on the mic… and would go...

Animals As Leaders Interview: Javier Reyes on The Joy of Motion

There’s no doubt that Animals As Leaders have taken heavy music to a new plateau. What started out as Tosin Abasi’s outlet to express his creativity has turned into a global sensation, resonating in the bloodstream of today’s youth. But the road to...

Stray From The Path Interview: Bringing it Back to the Streets

On an early November morning en route to Salt Lake City, Stray From The Path had a run with disaster – a patch of black ice sent the band’s van and trailer swerving off a frozen U.S. highway before the break of dawn. “We flipped and then a semi-truck...

Hatebreed Interview: Jamey Jasta on The Industry, & hosting MTV’s Headbanger’s Ball

About this interview In a 2008 interview with Ryan Minic of Ryan’s Rock Show, Jamey Jasta of Hatebreed reflected on the band’s evolution, the challenges of the music industry, and his personal philosophies on success and perseverance. He recounted the band’s early...