Introduction
Mash-up commonly refers to a mix of images, sounds, being initially attributed to music industry, as an audio technique of putting together two songs, blending them by placing the vocal track of one song over the instrumental part of the other song (O’Brien & Fitzgerald 1). Sonvilla – Weiss (9) talks about a mash-up culture, which contains several identifiable elements such as “collage, montage, sampling or remix practices” from one or from multiple materials, in which pieces from these materials are mingled, combined and re-combined, altered, manipulated, copied, for creating a new item, while still maintaining perceptible elements from the original piece, while ...