Lee Pritchard & Media Music Now

October 27, 2006

I am being played on local radio, I should join PRS! Right?

Filed under: Music Licensing, Your Questions — Royalty Free Music Info @ 6:35 pm

I have been in many discussions about the role of PRS I have been asked the following question numerous times by new composers and bands.

When should I join PRS?

In short I would say it is a judgement call on your part. In my experience, there are certain old school managers / music industry advisers that will have you believe it is the first thing you need to do in order to get paid. This is not strictly true!

PRS collect money from performances and broadcasts of your musical works. However, due to the huge task of monitoring this, PRS use a system of census that actually means that your music can be played yet missed by the census.

I think PRS do a great job for many composers / artists, but I do not think joining up should be the first thing you consider doing. In my opinion, I think it is worthwhile paying the admin fee and joining if you know that your works are being broadcast on major Terrestrial TV channels. If you are just being played on local radio for a few weeks a year, it is extremely unlikely that you will get any revenue. If you do it probably won’t recoup your admin fee.

So, in short, don’t join because somebody that apparently knows the industry tells you to.

Do some research, get the facts and join only when you think you will benefit financially.

Resources

This guy knows what he is talking about and has a detailed article about royalties.

Also, I have a two part article about copyright and licensing

This is cut and paste from the www.prs.co.uk…

Methods of using performance data for royalty distribution

census – full returns of all music played.

Where revenue is sufficient, PRS will distribute it to all the works performed. While it is the Society’s desire for this to be applied to all performances, at present it is only achieved for national terrestrial broadcast performances and certain major concerts.

sample – a subset of returns of all the music played.

In many cases the cost of collecting and processing details of all performances would be more than the revenue available. In these cases PRS collects information about some of the performances and uses that to represent all of them. These samples might be certain days in a broadcasters schedule, or certain concert events and are selected at random to reflect their overall value.

projection – returns of music from one source used to distribute another source

There are many uses of music, such as CDs and tapes for background music in shops and restaurants, where the actual value of each performance is probably only a few pence. In these cases it is too costly to create an effective sample. Instead PRS creates a statistical calculation of other music data based on a small survey of actual performances.

August 3, 2006

A Question About Podcast Licensing And BMI Royalty Payments

Filed under: Music Licensing, Your Questions — Royalty Free Music Info @ 4:59 pm

The Question…

Hello Mr. Pritchard,
I read your article on Music Licensing in the latest issue of the Galaris newsletter. My concern is, I am a songwriter/publisher member with BMI. I’ve had several of my mp3 music tracks performed or featured on various podcast productions but I haven’t seen any royalty payments from those performances. All of the songs featured or performed are registered with BMI. I appreciate the exposure but should BMI send me a royalty check for those performance of my music? What am I’m doing wrong? I look forward to your reply.

Thanks

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Lee Pritchard’s Answer…
Hi Gregory

Thank you for your question.

The BMI Internet Music license covers usage of any BMI music in podcasts. Once the podcaster has a license BMI request music usage reports identifying all of the music works used. As I understand it, it is not clear how royalties are calculated and paid out to BMI songwriter / publisher members.

(more…)

July 26, 2006

Music Licensing – The Basics

Filed under: Media Music, Music Licensing, Uncategorized — Royalty Free Music Info @ 12:53 pm

Using music in your multimedia, website or business project has legal implications and requires a music licensing agreement. Do you know what is covered? Do you know what entitlement you have to use the music?

The link takes you to a two-part article that explains the basics and looks at your possible options.

Music Licensing – The Basics – Part 1

Music Licensing – The Basics – Part 2

Please feel free to comment or ask additional questions.

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