Originally posted by JonPro:
All this sounds a little heavy and totally discouraging for you guys in the US. Is this only a problem (challenge) in the club scene, or does it get into the nursing home, church and concert scene also? What about if you do arrangements comprising of themes to three or four songs as a medley. Where is the boundary between copywrite and original?
Jon.
Copyrights are not a problem but they are something that has to be delt with by anyone who presents music in the public, including clubs, restaraunts, concert venues, schools, churches and more. Even public schools, which make no money from their performances, must pay performance fees to present music recitals and most music directors know how to do this. I'm not aware of any exclusions unless the music presented is classical.
The boundary is simple - if you write a song then you own the copyright to that work immediately upon writing it. To make it formal and provable in court, you file for a copyright, otherwise known as intellectual property rights. This is a legal deed much like the title to a car... it can be bought, sold and traded as real property.
FYI: it's "copyright" as in the rights to the copy, not "copywrite" - a song covered by copyright is "copyrighted", not "copywritten".
The way that copyright laws are defined an artist may secure their rights to their own original work. Others must pay if they "derive benefit from" that work. Note that is not the same as making money - in other words even if you use another person's work and make no money at all, such as when you make a free demo tape of music you didn't write yourself and don't make a cent from it, you are responsible for paying the royalties. If you make a medley of three or four songs then you are responsible for royalties to all of the individual authors and/or their publishers and/or their representative organizations. For that matter, even if you use a few seconds of a song, you are liable fo royalty fees... this is having an impact on people who sample.
Copyrights cover the work for 75 years after the death of the author, and even then the family of the deceased may file for an extension (and often do). Practically every popular song written in the 20th century is covered by copyright currently. Once the copyright expires then the song is considered public domain, such as all classical music.
One interesting side note: arrangements are not copyrightable in the US, which is a problem for professional music arrangers (not the electronic ones we use). So I understand that some musical arrangers here in the US actually file for their arrangement copyrights in France where they are allowed to do so. The US is then bound by it's own international agreements to recognize that copyright.
Disclaimer: I am fairly knowledgeable about copyrights but I am not a legal expert.
[This message has been edited by The Pro (edited 01-08-2005).]