Term
The rights for copyright holders |
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Definition
Reproduce the work, Distribute copies of the work, Perform it publicly, Create Derivative works, Display the work publicly |
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Term
Basic history of copyright law. Where it originated and the major copyright legislation milestones in the USA |
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Definition
1710 British pass the Statute of Anne - protects copies of writings for 14 years, renewable for 14 years 1791 and 1793 - french laws for fine arts grant authors control of copying, distributing, and sale of their works plus a fixed term of rights after their death 1787 U.S. Constitution under Legislative Branch |
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Term
What section of the USA Constitution does copyright come under |
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Definition
Article 1, section 8 in 1787 "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors, the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." |
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Term
What other items are addressed in that section 8 |
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Definition
powers of congress, legislative borrow money/regulate commerce rules of naturalization established the post office form armies/navies and declare war make laws to enforce the constitution promote science and useful arts |
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Term
The main points and copyright term in the Copyright Act of 1790 |
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Definition
first ever FEDERAL copyright law (States had already adopted copyright laws) term = 14 years "from the time of recording the title thereof" performance and mechanical rights not included |
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Term
The main points and copyright term in the Copyright Act of 1831 |
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Definition
first general revision to US Copyright law term = 28 years with option to renew for another 14 years (42 years total) |
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Term
The main points and copyright term in the Copyright Act of 1909 |
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Definition
allows the right to perform work publicly (first protected in 1889) translate the work into other languages the right of mechanical reproduction first term = 28 years from date of first publication with option to renew for additional 28 years within 1 year of expiration of first term (56 years total) Established requirement of copyright notice on work |
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Term
The main points and copyright term in the Copyright Act of 1976 |
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Definition
Defined sound recordings as "original works of authorship comprising an aggregate of musical, spoken, or other sounds that have been fixed in tangible form" phonorecords as "physical objects in which sounds are fixed" (records, tapes, cds) Finally addressed TV, cable, movies, records Defined publication as "distribution to the public" Spelled out "Fair Use" Term = life of the composer + 50 years broadened to works not published but in "fixed" form and those without copyright notices Right of Termination (35 years after transfer, begins in 2013) Law went into effect January 1, 1978 Juke Box Performance Royalties covered covered Cable & Satellite Royalties Copyright Royalty Tribunal established |
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Term
The outcome of the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 |
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Definition
No longer necessary to have copyright notice on the work Work does not need to be registered, but you must register in order to file an infringement claim Transfer of copyright ownership not required to be registered with Copyright Office Public Domain songs in the USA could become protected |
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Term
What was changed in the Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 (Sonny Bono Act)? |
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Definition
CTEA increased the total term of all works under copyright protection as of January 1, 1999 by 20 additional years Aligned USA terms with European Union terms Works published after December 31, 1977 are protected for 70 years after the death of composer |
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Term
What is the duration of a copyrighted work published since 1/1/78? |
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Definition
70 years after the death of the composer |
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Term
What is the duration of a copyrighted if there is more than one writer? |
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Definition
70 years after the death of the last living composer |
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Term
How long is work for hire works covered in the USA? |
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Definition
95 years from publication or 120 years from creation (whichever comes first) |
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Term
What’s a mechanical license? |
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Definition
payments for devices "serving to mechanically reproduce sound" |
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Term
Why is mechanical license compulsory? |
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Definition
Congress was concerned that the music industry was going to develop into a gigantic monopoly The copyright owner must license to anyone who wants to use it in a phonorecord |
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Term
What is the current statutory mechanical royalty rate? |
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Definition
9.1 cents per composition up to 5 minutes or 1.75 cents per minute over 5 minutes long |
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Term
Who sets the current statutory mechanical royalty rates? |
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Definition
Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) |
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Term
Are jukebox licenses compulsory? |
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Definition
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Term
Are broadcast licenses compulsory? |
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Definition
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Term
Are cable re-broadcast licenses compulsory? |
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Definition
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Term
Explain what a synchronization license is? |
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Definition
license to use music in "timed synchronization" with visual images includes motion pictures, tv, tv commercials, and home video devices, but not radio commercials |
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Term
Know the difference between the master rights and the publishing rights |
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Definition
Master recording : The right to license the actual sound recording of a song to users. owned by labels, publishers or Artists, it is separate from the song license. Publishing rights: The right to license a songwriter’s copyrighted musical composition or words to users. |
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Term
Know all the Performing Rights organizations in the USA |
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Definition
ASCAP BMI SESAC Global Music Rights SoundExchange |
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Term
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Definition
SoundExchange is a nonprofit organization whose board is made up equally of record company and artist representatives. SoundExchange collects for performances of masters instead of songs. includes satellite/internet radio and digital performance royalties paid to soundexchange |
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Term
Is there performance income in movie theatres |
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Definition
a. In the USA? No b. Outside the USA? Yes |
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Term
Royalty rates for different types of print music |
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Definition
Sheet Music : 20% of marketed retail price Folio : 10-12.5% on marketed retail price personality folios: additional royalty of 5% for using name and likeness of the artist Educational : 10% of SRP |
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Term
Who is performance income outside the USA paid to? |
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Definition
The foreign subpublishers publishers make deals with local publishers in each territory to collect on their behalf (subpublisher) The local performance right society of the foreign country pays the publisher’s share to local subpublishers (who then pay the US publisher) and the writer’s share to the US PRO (who then pay the writer). |
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Term
How much do subpublishers normally keep? |
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Definition
Can keep 10-50%, but normally they keep 15-25%, that is why they’re called 75/25 or 85/15 deals |
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Term
Who usually owns the masters? |
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Definition
Labels, publishers, artists Protected by Federal law since 2/15/1972 |
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Term
Another name for a production music house? |
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Definition
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Term
What publisher owns most of the Beatles songs? |
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Definition
Sony/ATV Side note - Michael Jackson owns half the masters |
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Term
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Definition
A limited duration monopoly |
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Term
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Definition
Original works of sufficient materiality fixed in tangible form |
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Term
When does something become copyrighted? |
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Definition
As soon as you make a tangible copy |
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Term
Are you required to register your copyright with the Copyright Office? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the exceptions to the copyright monopoly? |
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Definition
Cable t.v. rebroadcast, Public Broadcasting System, Jukeboxes, Digital performance of records, Phonorecords and digital downloads of non dramatic music compositions. |
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Term
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Definition
Any work intended to be performed dramatically and tell a story. Includes plays, scripts, choreographic notation, choreographic shows, and scenarios for a film (but not the film itself). |
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Term
When did mechanicals first appear in the copyright law? |
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Definition
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Term
What does “mechanical” mean? |
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Definition
working or produced by machines or machinery; digital is considered mechanical for royalties in the music industry. |
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Term
Under what conditions is a copyright owner required to issue a mechanical license? |
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Definition
The song is a non-dramatic musical work. It has been previously recorded and previously distributed in phonorecord form. The new recording doesn’t change the melody or fundamental character of the song. The new recording is only used in phonorecords. Once a song has been recorded and released to the public, the copyright owner must license it to anyone who wants to use it in a phonorecord (defined as such in the Copyright Act) for a specific payment established by law. |
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Term
Are mechanicals paid on free goods? |
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Definition
Passman page 229, Paragraph 3, line 2: “The controlled composition clause will say you get no mechanicals on free goods” and page 75, “The record company doesn’t get paid for them so they don’t bear royalties” THIS IS FOR ARTISTS. FOR PUBLISHERS, mechanicals ARE paid on free goods because they are paid on goods DISTRIBUTED, not SOLD. (pg 224) |
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Term
What is the makeup and function of the Copyright Royalty Board? |
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Definition
Three judge panel that sets the: Mechanical Royalty Rates Cable TV Secondary Transmissions Non-commercial Broadcasts for Non-dramatic Works Digital Performance of Sound Recordings Digital Delivery of Phonorecords |
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Term
What are foreign mechanicals based on? |
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Definition
Paid as a % of the wholesale price |
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Term
What are the main functions of a publisher? |
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Definition
Music Publisher Functions: Administrator Exploit/License (Song plugger) Creative Staff Person (A&R) |
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Term
How do publishers normally split the money with their writers? |
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Definition
50/50 unless otherwise stated in the contract. |
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Term
What are the various types of music publishers? |
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Definition
Majors Major Affiliates Independents (Stand-Alones) Writer Publishers |
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Term
What are the major sources of music publishing income? |
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Definition
Royalties: (PMPS) Performance Mechanicals Print Synchronization |
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Term
What are the names of the companies that issue mechanical licenses in the USA and Canada? |
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Definition
Harry Fox Agency (USA) Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency (Canada) |
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Term
What fees the companies that issue mechanical licenses in the USA and Canada take for their services? |
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Definition
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Term
What else do mechanical licenses organizations do? |
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Definition
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Term
How often do mechanical licenses companies pay? |
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Definition
Quarterly, 45 days after the close of the quarter |
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Term
Do record companies normally pay the full statutory rate? |
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Definition
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Term
what rate do record companies normally pay? |
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Definition
Normally in the 75% of the statutory rate range |
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Term
Understand what a Controlled Composition Clause is and the various rates paid under it |
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Definition
Puts a limit on how much the record company has to pay for each controlled composition Controlled composition: song that’s written, owned, or controlled by the artist in whole or in part. Normal rate for Controlled Compositions: 75% of the statutory rate Record clubs or budget records: 50% of statutory rate Albums: Usually 10 times the single song rate per album Mechanicals for free goods: No Mechanicals paid for multiple uses: No Paid on Public Domain songs: No or 50% of the normal royalty |
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Term
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Definition
Digital phonorecord delivery |
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Term
When was DPD added to the copyright law? |
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Definition
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Term
How are licenses with venues normally issued? |
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Definition
Blanket licenses depends on square footage and max occupancy |
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Term
Can a writer affiliate with more than one PRO? |
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Definition
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Term
Can a publisher affiliate with more than one PRO? |
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Definition
Yes, but must be registered under different names. [ASCAP 1yr, BMI 2yrs, SESAC 3yrs] |
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Term
What are the ranges of synch fees for use in different parts of a movie? |
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Definition
Major studio : 10,000-100,000 Main Title : 50,000-250,000 End title : 35,000-100,000 |
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Term
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Definition
Most Favored Nations = everyone is paid the same rate Rates go up if anyone ever gets more. pg 252, “they pay the same amount for every song, no matter what” - regarding license fees |
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Term
What are the normal fees for video game synch? |
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Definition
Major Hits: 50K normal rates : 8K-10K commercial : 10k-30k No royalties except for music-based games. |
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Term
Know the difference between interactive and non-interactive radio |
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Definition
Interactive : Spotify (you decide what music you want to hear) Non- interactive : Pandora (someone else decides what you hear) |
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Term
What are the royalties based on? |
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Definition
performance royalties; performing rights. “each user needs your permission to play the song on the radio, TV, night clubs, amusement parks, etc.” |
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Term
What is a Mixed Bundled Service? |
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Definition
One that includes one music product with one or more non-music products or services together |
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Term
What’s a Paid Locker Service? |
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Definition
You store music you personally have access to on another server - aid services to upload and save your music in the cloud and access it from any device you own. They can scan and match your music to theirs. |
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Term
What’s a Purchased Content Locker? |
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Definition
Requires you to upload your own music to their server (Amazon and Google), then allow you to access it from your device(s). |
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Term
What fees do foreign subpublishers normally take? |
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Definition
Monies earned: 15%-25% Printed music : 10%-15% |
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Term
What does “At Source” mean? |
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Definition
This means the percentage remitted to the original publisher from the subpublisher must be based on the earnings in the country where earned, which is the source. |
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Term
Know about DART and the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 |
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Definition
Digital Audio Recording Technologies The Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 Gives permission to copy records at home for private non-commercial use Imposes a tax on digital audio recorders and digital audio tapes. |
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Term
What is included in the DART act? |
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Definition
Money is paid to: Record Companies, Featured Artists, Musician Unions, songwriters, and publishers. Computers are NOT covered! |
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Term
What is the most important thing to do when setting up a publishing company? |
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Definition
Register the name with a PRO! |
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Term
What other things do you need to do when setting up a publishing company? |
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Definition
Eventually set up three publishing companies with the three US PROs, if working in the USA. Affiliate as a writer Fictitious Business name Published Register the copyrights Register the songs |
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Term
Who normally pays royalties to songwriters? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the exceptions in paying royalties to songwriters by publishers? |
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Definition
Performance money and DART money |
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Term
What does “co-terminus” mean? |
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Definition
Two or more deals with the same term |
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Term
What is a “Passive 360 Deal”? |
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Definition
The record company has no control over the rights involved. They just collect the money. |
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Term
With one songwriter writing the music and another one writing the lyrics, who controls each part of the song? |
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Definition
Both control the ENTIRE song and it does not matter who wrote lyrics and who wrote music |
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Term
What is “Net Publisher’s Share” or NPS? |
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Definition
The amount that is left over to be paid to the publisher once all the obligations are met Admin cost - writer’s share = net publisher’s share |
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Term
What does “Co-publishing” mean? |
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Definition
Two or more people share the copyright to a song |
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Term
What is the normal range for publisher administration fees? |
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Definition
In the 10-25% of gross income range deducted first before anything else |
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Term
What are some of the direct expenses that are deducted before the publisher receives their NPS? |
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Definition
Copyright Office Demo Costs Collection fees Legal Costs Preparation of Lead Sheets |
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Term
Know the different types of publisher admin deals? |
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Definition
One Administrator One Administrator with Restrictions One Administrator with Direct Payment to other Parties True Co-administration Co-administration with Exceptions: Controlled compositions, Statutory Rate Licenses |
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Term
What is a “cover record”? |
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Definition
Recording of a U.S. composition by a local artist in the local territory, obtained by the administrator |
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Term
What is the technical definition of “Work for Hire”? |
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Definition
If it is made by an employee within the scope of employment, it’s a work for hire. If the employer is “directing” or “supervising” the creation of the work. |
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Term
What are the criteria that define a Work for Hire piece? |
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Definition
Commissioned Created under a written agreement Created for use in one of the following: A motion picture or other A/V work A collective work A compilation A translation of a foreign work A supplementary work |
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Term
Understand Termination Rights |
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Definition
Added in the 1976 Copyright Act You can get your copyright back 35 years after you transfer the rights to a publisher |
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Term
Does Termination Rights apply to Work for Hire? |
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Definition
No, because there was no transfer in the first place |
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Term
What did the Fairness in Music Licensing Act add to the copyright law? (1998) |
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Definition
This act states that stores under 2,000 sq.ft. or restaurants and bars under 3,750 sq.ft. don’t need a license to perform music. Advocated by the National Restaurant Association, National Licensed Beverage Association lobbied heavily for the bill (WTO was not happy). |
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Term
What are the negatives for not registering a copyright with the Copyright Office? |
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Definition
Can't collect Compulsory License Royalties Can't file an infringement action If you don’t register within five years after first publication of the work, you lose the legal presumption that everything in the registration is valid. (can't stop someone from using your song) you can’t recover Attorney fees nor can you get statutory damages unless you registered before the infringement happened. |
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Term
What are the legal remedies for copyright infringement? |
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Definition
You get the fair market value of the use the infringer made. You can recover the infringer’s profits. You can get an injunction. (not using song) You can recover statutory damages (if registered). The court can order destruction or seizure If the infringement is willful, there are criminal penalties. You can get your court costs (if registered). |
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Term
Know where the music fits in during the movie production process |
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Definition
Music is left until the last possible moment when the film is locked and the amount of money spent on music pales in comparison to the other production costs It must meet a critical release date, so recording and editing need to be completed in time for distribution. Composer has 8-10 weeks to score and record the music. Sometimes even less. |
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Term
Know the three types of music primary to most films |
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Definition
Original Underscore Original Song Licensed preexisting Song |
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Term
What are the deals involved in Motion Picture Music? |
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Definition
motion picture deals: The Performer (singer/instrumental) The record company to whom the performer is signed The record producer The songwriter The publisher to whom the songwriter is signed The owner of a Master Recording that’s sampled in the song The publisher who owns a song that’s being sampled The record Company putting out the soundtrack album |
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Term
What are the rights involved in Film Music? |
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Definition
Acquisition of rights for the picture Performing artists: Songwriters, composers and publishers Record producers Record companies (both for use of existing masters or samples in the film, and for clearing rights to put new recording of their artists in the film. License of Rights from the picture company to others: A deal with a record company to release a soundtrack album Licensing film clips for music videos Possible a publishing administration deal |
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Term
What are the two types of Film Music Performer Deals? |
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Definition
to perform in the picture to use the performance in a soundtrack album or single |
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Term
How are artists usually paid to perform in a film? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some standard fees artists usually are paid to perform in a film? |
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Definition
Up to 400K + for major artists Norm is: 200K - 400K for superstar 15K-25K for mid level artist 5K-10K for minor artists 10K-20K for featured instrumentalists 100K for big names |
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Term
Explain All-in Deals for Film Music |
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Definition
When the artist prefers to negotiate a deal with the film company to record and deliver a track in exchange for a set fee, but the artist pays the recording cost and keeps the difference. Not as beneficial, because the artist doesn’t know if the director will make them re-record until they (the director) likes it, all at the artist’s expense. |
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Term
What are the important aspects of the soundtrack record album? |
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Definition
What’s the royalty to the artist? Who is the royalty paid to? For the distributor what can be recouped against your royalty? What can your record company recoup? What rights does the film company have? Roles in the release of music videos |
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Term
What are the royalty amounts for soundtrack albums? |
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Definition
12-14% all-in, pro-rated 16-18% for major artists both of the above could include escalations based on record sales Record companies want to collect the royalties and keep 50% before paying the artists |
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Term
What is recoupable in soundtrack albums? |
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Definition
recording costs (negotiable to be non-recoupable) artist’s performance fees (negotiable to be non-recoupable) conversion costs re-use fees |
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Term
Understand the rights to artist film recordings |
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Definition
artist can use recordings on their own record restriction on re-recording (usually 5 years) right to release singles and music videos film shares cost of music video split 50/50 limited film footage allowed on the music video |
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Term
Understand about licensing of the master for motion pictures |
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Definition
song licensing, not the score or underscore deal between the film company and record company right to use the master is only for the physical recording, not for publishing rights artist may or may not have approval rights from the record company artist can block a deal if they own the publishing on the song |
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Term
What are the two main elements of the record company/film company master license? |
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Definition
how much is the synch fee? what is the royalty if the master is going to be used on a soundtrack album? |
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Term
What determines the fee the record company will charge? |
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Definition
The popularity of the artist How the music will be used in the film |
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Term
What are the royalty ranges for the fee the record company will charge? |
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Definition
11-14% prorated with the Most Favored Nations (MFN) Clause |
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Term
How is the money split between the record company and the artist? |
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Definition
50/50 if the record company is releasing the soundtrack album or single, the artist would get their normal royalty rate |
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Term
What are the two types of soundtrack albums? |
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Definition
Score Albums (consist of only underscore music) Song Albums (songs from major artist. Consists of pre-written material or songs specifically for the film) |
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Term
What are the advances and royalty rates for both score albums and song albums? |
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Definition
Score: Usually just the re-use fee (these albums don’t usually sell too well), 17-18% royalties Song: $100k-$300k, some up to $500k, royalties up to 18-20% with escalations up to 22% if sales reach over 1M copies |
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Term
Who pays a majority of the costs to release soundtrack albums? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What is the background music of a movie called? |
|
Definition
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Term
What are the fee ranges for film songwriters? |
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Definition
$0 to $100,000 for established writers A majority of the deals fall in the $25,000 to $50,000 range for major films It depends on whether the writer gets a part of the publishing |
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Term
What is it called when they get paid more money based on higher revenue from the film? |
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Definition
Kickers (additional money based on the success of the film) |
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Term
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Definition
Meaning the deal is done over a series of “steps” Writer creates the song and gives the company a demo recording for a small amount of money. If the film company doesn’t like it, the writer is required to re-write the song. Once the film company is happy it goes forward with the deal; if not, the deal is off. |
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Term
What does “on spec” mean? |
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Definition
“On Speculation” - write the song without a commitment from the film company to pay a full fee. Meaning film company pays nothing or sometimes a few bucks for the cost of a demo. |
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Term
Are film songwriters normally paid royalties or work for hire? |
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Definition
They are almost always treated as Work for Hire. |
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Term
What rights will film companies ask for in their film songwriter deals? |
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Definition
To use the song in sequels, prequels, trailers, co-promotions, studio tours, theme parks, live entertainment, and etc. |
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Term
What is a single card credit? |
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Definition
No one else is on the screen at the same time However, the writer usually doesn’t get a single card-at best, they share credit with the performer. |
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Term
What is the billing block of a movie ad poster? |
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Definition
It is that microscopic box of credits down at the bottom of movie ads. |
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Term
Do composers normally get a share of the publishing for film scores? |
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Definition
No, with exception of low budget films where the producers let the composer keep the publishing in exchange for a lower fee to write the music. |
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Term
What are typical film composer fees? |
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Definition
50K to 1.5million+, Normal range is $300K to $700K |
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Term
Instead of exclusivity, what will film companies normally ask for from a composer? |
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Definition
First Priority, which means you can take other work as long as you perform on time. |
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Term
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Definition
Where the composer and director sit down with a final cut of the film and determine exactly which “spots” need music, and exact length of each. |
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Term
How much do orchestrators get paid and what are they paid based on? |
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Definition
$80 - $85 per page of score, varies based on size of the orchestra and number of pages of music, as well as complexity of orchestration . As a rough guideline: simple orchestrations is about $400 per minute of music. |
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Term
What kinds of royalties are paid to composers, producers and conductors on soundtracks? |
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Definition
Conducting: 6 - 10% Producing: 3 - 4% Floors - For major composers |
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Term
What is the one thing that the record company normally recoups in a soundtrack deal? |
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Definition
Conversion costs (converting a film recording to a master that can be used in a record) |
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Term
What is a composer package deal and what is the normal pricing? |
|
Definition
Package deal = the music including recording costs. Pricing: $50K for budget to $2million for major films Purely electronic: $100K - $400K Hybrid of electronic and real instruments: $50K - $250K (Orchestra and Studio are both paid) Low budget: $5K to $10K (Composers will want the publishing and soundtrack) |
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Term
What are the normal exclusions from composer deals? |
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Definition
Licensing of outside music Recording costs of outside music Re-use fees Re-scoring Lyricist expense Vocalist expense Music Editor fees Mag stock (soundtrack imprinted on the film) and transfer cost Pre-records Sidelining Excess Musicians Library Music |
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Term
What will a composer usually ask for on low budget films? |
|
Definition
Back-End participation or bonus when the box office reaches certain levels. A percentage of the publishing Soundtrack record extra royalties Adding the advance that the film company gets for the soundtrack album. |
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Term
What are the normal fees for TV composers? |
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Definition
(Almost all TV packages) Background Score $5-$10 K for 30min, $9-$20 K for 1 hour, $10-$60K for 2 hours TV Themes $10-$25 K or up to $40K+ |
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Term
How are video game composers paid and the normal rates? |
|
Definition
Work for hire and package deals Normal rates are $1K to $1,500 per minute of music, $1.5K-$2.5K for package deals |
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|
Term
What are the roles of the Music Supervisor? |
|
Definition
Coordinates the music for the film Focuses on the choice of songs May be involved in the underscore as well Works with the Producer and Director to work out the type of music needed before production. (Songs on camera must be pre-recorded; they are lip-synched or danced to on the film.) |
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Term
What are typical film music budgets? |
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Definition
$500K - $1.5 million of total $40 million - $100 million film budget. |
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Term
How are Music Supervisors paid? |
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Definition
$25K to $100K per picture Top Supervisors also have royalties on soundtracks of 1 - 2% non-pro-rated. They may also get escalations of .25% or .5% at 500,000 and 1 million units. Royalties are paid after recoupment of costs Sometimes box office bonuses are included. |
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Term
Are Music Supervisors used in television? |
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Definition
Used when TV shows have to license a lot of music Rush productions Smaller budgets TV production departments not equipped to deal with complex clearance issues Fees are $3,500 or so per episode with 1% royalty with records or downloads + sales escalations They search indie record labels, YouTube and similar sites looking for unknown artists with cool material to put it on a TV show (pay is very little but placements promote artists career) |
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Term
Know the big mistakes in the downfall of the record industry and the historical significance of each one. |
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Definition
CD Longboxes Decentralized record industry’s inability to move quickly Innovativeness of initial solution was not projected to scale Illustrative of record industry’s reliance on record retailers Independent radio promotion Plugola (derivative of Payola) - product or service endorsed on TV or radio for personal gain without consent of networks or stations. Accepted bribes for free “plugs” for endorsements on air 4 major broadcasters in 2001 iHeart Media CBS Radio Citadel (owned by Cumulus) these controlled 60% of the market Entercom Digital Audio Tape (DAT) developed by Sony Corp. in mid-1980s replacement of cassettes tried to make a copy protection (copy-code) to prevent piracy but the electronic developers were angry at the record industry’s request to make their product inferior so the record labels refused to license to DAT. should have worked together with the consumer tech community to establish a “best practices”, which could have laid better groundwork for later battles on digital media and consumer technology. Nothing was solved - instead the market shifted the burden to another segment of the tech community: computers. The single was killed record industry sales relied on singles until commercialization of LPs in 1948. singles were used as a way to sample the album before purchase. 80s-90s phased out the single because it cost to much to produce for profit margin Discontinued to drive further album sales Industry had not built or sustained a commercial consumer interest in their singles’ products. It completely undercut the revenue stream. Inflated margin of CD album sales because industry relied too much on physical distribution and retailing, so they couldn’t survive off lower profit margins. Pumping up the Big Box Retailers Retailers like Best Buy and WalMart would sell their CDs for an extremely low profit margin or at a loss, which drove competition of local/national record stores out of the market In 1996 these retailers accounted for 25% of all CD sales in the market Co-promotion schemes (a form of payola) MAP - Minimum Advertised Price marketing funds based on price at or above specified level. Support for stores selling CDs above a certain price consumers paid $480M more than they should have due to MAP 2000 - Record labels accused of price fixing Drove Tower Records and Musicland into bankruptcy Devalued music to consumers Consolidated retailing power to few big chains SDMI - Secure Digital Music Initiative Purpose was to develop technology specifications protecting digital music Goals: convenient access to music online, apply DRM restrictions to work of artists, and promote new music related business and technologies Consumers tried to hack SDMI encryption Instead of monetizing new market, group just sought copyright protection RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) Lawsuits sued its own customer base 5 months after iTunes surfaced ended 5 year lawsuit campaign in 2008, which targeted 18,000 Record labels lost money There was little impact from the lawsuit and it martyred those actually prosecuted. Sony BMG’s Rootkit A software on CDs sold, which would illegal copying and online piracy, but was automatically installed on Windows desktop computers when consumers tried to play the CDs Software was too illegitimate, consumers outrage at Sony’s lack of empathy, which pushed Sony into losing $2-4M in recalls, and customers exchanging CDs without software Reinforced Napster’s belief industry was too focused on punishing consumers than catering to them Record label was forced to dissolve their R&D into copy protection |
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Term
What companies jointly developed the CD and is still paid a royalty for this? |
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Definition
Sony and Philips worked jointly on their own versions of technology and used lasers developed at MIT and Bell Labs in the 1960s. |
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Term
When did the Longbox retire? |
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Definition
The longbox retired in April 199,3 |
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Term
Which four companies today control more than 60% of radio? |
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Definition
By 2001 iHeart Media, Citadel, Cumulus and Entercom controlled more than 60% of radio. |
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Term
What were the big changes in the Telecommunications Act of 1996? |
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Definition
This Act removed the caps that a single entity could own no more than 2 broadcast stations per market and no more than 40 total. This resulted in Massive industry consolidation. |
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Term
How many radio stations can an entity own in various size markets? |
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Definition
Restrictions are based on a sliding scale. In a radio market of 45 or more stations, an entity may own up to 8 radio stations. No more than 5 on the same service (AM or FM) radio markets between 30 and 44 radio stations may own up to 7 no more than 4 on the same service. radio markets between 15 and 29 radio stations may own up to 6 no more than 4 on the same station Radio markets 14 or fewer may own 5 stations no more than 3 in the same station the entity doesn’t own more than 50% of all the radio stations in that market. |
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Term
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Definition
Payola is the illegal practice of payment or inducement by record companies for the broadcast of recordings on radio. |
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Term
What was excluded from the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992? |
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Definition
Excluded professional audio equipment and computers from having to include the Serial Copy Management System. |
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Term
Who collects and pays out DART royalties? |
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Definition
Royalties are collected by the Copyright Office (Quarterly). Distributed according to statute. |
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Term
Who does the DART royalties money go to? |
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Definition
Sound recording fund (⅔ of royalties collected) divided as follows: 60% for the copyright owners of the sound recording. 40% for the featured recording artist with a small percentage going to AFM and AFTRA non-featured artists. Music works fund (⅓ of royalties collected) divided as follows: 50% to publishers 50% to writers |
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Term
When was the first CD released? |
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Definition
Billy Joel’s album 52nd Street released on October 1st, 1982 |
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Term
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Definition
MAP - Minimum Advertised Price marketing funds based on price at or above specified level. Support for stores selling CDs above a certain price |
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Term
Who was the founder of Napster? |
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Definition
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Term
What was “Fair Play” encryption? |
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Definition
Prevented users from playing the Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) music files on more than three computers. |
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Term
When did the iTunes store launch? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most important asset to a performing group? |
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Definition
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Term
What can the group name be protected by? |
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Definition
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Term
What’s the difference between a Personal Manager and a Business Manager? |
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Definition
Personal manager = The most important person to help your career Helps make major business decisions Decisions on recording and record companies Decisions on publishing and publishers Helps with the creative process Promotes the artistic career Assembles and heads the team Coordinates concert tours. Business Manager = Handles money |
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Term
Who is the first person an artist should sign for their personal team? |
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Definition
Personal manager or lawyer |
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Term
What fees do Personal Managers charge? |
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Definition
15% to 20% of earnings (what you bring in) Majority get 15% |
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Term
What does Power of Attorney mean? |
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Definition
The power to act for you right to sign your name to contracts hire and fire your other representatives cash checks |
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Term
What kinds of functions does a Business Manager perform? |
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Definition
(Handles the money) Collects it Keeps track of it Pays the bills invests funds Files tax returns (Does not need to be licensed!) |
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Term
What fees are paid to Business Managers? |
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Definition
5% Hourly Flat Fee Monthly Fee |
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Term
What kinds of fees do Lawyers charge artists? |
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Definition
Most in the music industry don’t charge hourly Those that do charge between $150-$600 per hour Some charge a 5-10% fee Monthly retainer Value billing (based on the deal) |
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Term
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Definition
UNIONS - AFM, SAG-AFTRA, Actor’s Equity |
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Term
What is the market share for the top three record companies? |
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Definition
Universal-19.7% (including EMI) Warner-19.4% Sony-15.5% |
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Term
What are the departments in a normal label? |
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Definition
A&R Sales Marketing Promotion Product Management New Media Production Finance Business Affairs/Legal International |
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Term
Who are the major record distributors? |
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Definition
EMI distributes (Capitol and Virgin) Sony distributes (Columbia, Epic, Jive, and RCA Records Universal distributes (Universal/Republic, Interscope/A&M/Geffen, Island/Defjam, Motown WEA distributes to Warner Bros., Elektra, Atlantic |
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Term
What are the two types of Independent Labels? |
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Definition
Major-Distributed Independent True Independent |
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Term
What is the Artist Royalty based on for record sales? |
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Definition
% of wholesale price (PPD) |
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Term
Are artist royalties paid on free goods? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the packaging deduction for CDs? |
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Definition
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Term
What are unrecouped royalties called in an artist’s agreement? |
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Definition
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Term
Explain Cross Collateralization? |
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Definition
Part of every record deal Advances from different records all go into one pot of recoupable advances Can also apply to different agreements (such as recording and publishing) Record companies try for cross collateralization sequentially. Current advances cross collateralized with past and future recordings. Recoup advances “under this or any other agreement.” |
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Term
A Gold Record means what level of sales? |
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Definition
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Term
A Platinum Record means what level of sales? |
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Definition
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Term
What are normal artist royalties on records? |
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Definition
New Artist : 13%-16% of PPD Middle level : 15%-16% Superstar : 20% + |
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Term
What are producer royalty ranges? |
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Definition
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Term
What if a mixer gets a royalty? |
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Definition
It is deducted from artist’s royalty |
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Term
What does Pay or Play mean? |
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Definition
Record label either pays for you to play or pay for you to go away (buy you out of record deal) |
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Term
What does Exclusivity mean in a record deal? |
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Definition
You can’t make records with anyone else during the term of agreement. |
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Term
What are normal royalty rates for sales of a USA artist’s record in Canada? |
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Definition
85% of the USA Rate (ex: 10% USA Rate = 8.5% in Canada) |
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Term
What about in other “major” territories such as the UK? |
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Definition
70% to 75% of the USA rate (ex: “10% of USA rate = 7%-7.5% of PPD) |
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Term
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Definition
Rest of World (the grab bag of countries left over) Royaltys run around 50% to 66.66% of the U.S. basic rate 5% to 6.66% of PPD |
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Term
What are normal reserves for mid-level artists? |
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Definition
35% to 50% of the records shipped |
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Term
What is the name of the service that tracks record sales? |
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Definition
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Term
Understand the difference between non-interactive and interactive webcasting |
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Definition
Non-Interactive: users don’t have control over what they hear (Pandora, iTunes Radio) Interactive: you do have control - (Streaming on Demand) |
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Term
What are some examples of streaming on demand? |
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Definition
“Celestial Jukeboxes/Cloud servers” Spotify Rhapsody Rdio |
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Term
What is the largest satellite radio company? |
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Definition
Sirius XM - (monthly or annual fee - non-interactive) |
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Term
For permanent downloads how much does the digital service provider usually keep? |
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Definition
30% = Digital Service Provider |
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Term
How much do record companies get on ringtones? |
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Definition
50% of retail price for mastertones |
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Term
How much do record companies get on interactive streaming? |
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Definition
60% of ad revenue and/or subscription fee prorated for each master |
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Term
How much do record companies get on full lockers? |
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Definition
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Term
How much do record companies get on bundled service? |
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Definition
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Term
How much do record companies get on video streaming? |
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Definition
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Term
How much do record companies get on apps? |
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Definition
Apple and others usually keep 30% |
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Term
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Definition
Putting your performances on records with performances of other artists |
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Term
What are the royalties on mid-priced records? |
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Definition
66.66% to 75% of the US basic rate (6.66% to 7.5% if you have a 10% royalty). |
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Term
What are the royalties on budget records? |
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Definition
50% of the tip-line royalty rate |
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Term
What are the royalties on record clubs? |
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Definition
Lesser of: Half of your top line royalty rate or 50% of your company’s net licensing receipts from the record club. |
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