Acquiring parts for a bootleg

actually no - the term bootleg comes from the fact that the product is illegal and mostly refers to unofficial recordings that are subsequently sold for profit by someone other than the company who owns the rights to the music or the performances

in most cases such bootleg recordings are obtained by using hidden recording equipment in a similar way that alcohol was shipped around the US during the Prohibition Era (18th amendment 1917 - 1919), usually in hidden pockets in a bootleg

as for what you want to do, the term (bootleg) may have grown by elision (cultural mis-use) to mean what you think it means
 
actually no - the term bootleg comes from the fact that the product is illegal and mostly refers to unofficial recordings that are subsequently sold for profit by someone other than the company who owns the rights to the music or the performances

in most cases such bootleg recordings are obtained by using hidden recording equipment in a similar way that alcohol was shipped around the US during the Prohibition Era (18th amendment 1917 - 1919), usually in hidden pockets in a bootleg

as for what you want to do, the term (bootleg) may have grown by elision (cultural mis-use) to mean what you think it means

Ok, so ignoring the fact that it isn't true to the dictionary definition, people often refer to an unauthorized remix as a bootleg, which leads me back to my question, how do they remix it if they aren't formally given the stems of the song.
 
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