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Hello to the experts. I'm brand new to the forum and hope you can help me out with some advice. If you pay a songwriter to write music who should own the copyrights? What is the industry standard for division of profits within a band?

Comments

gdoubleyou Fri, 03/02/2007 - 19:32

Big question with no standard answer.

Everything is up for negotiation, you can hash it out between parties, and or get lawyers involved.

You could buy a song outright, or go into an agreement where the writer retains copyrights, but relinquishes publishing rights.

It also depends on if the song was a collaboration.

Google contracts there should be some examples to be found.

8)

anonymous Fri, 03/02/2007 - 20:00

Thank you for your quick response. Another question - if you entered into an agreement where the writer retained copyrights but not publishing rights, exactly what would that entitle you, as the performing artist, to?

FYI..I have a songwriter/entertainment producer who wants to write songs for my daughter to sing, but he said he wants to retain copyrights. How can I protect my daughter's interests in this situation?
Thanks in advance.

Thomas W. Bethel Sat, 03/03/2007 - 05:39

maxbear wrote: Thank you for your quick response. Another question - if you entered into an agreement where the writer retained copyrights but not publishing rights, exactly what would that entitle you, as the performing artist, to?

FYI..I have a songwriter/entertainment producer who wants to write songs for my daughter to sing, but he said he wants to retain copyrights. How can I protect my daughter's interests in this situation?
Thanks in advance.

When it comes to contract law get a lawyer involved....it is worth the money.

BobRogers Thu, 03/22/2007 - 09:48

I second the recommendation for Passman's book. It is very clearly written and it is accurate on the topics that I know enough about to be able to check. He is very good on copyright, publishing rights, and mechanical rights.

My only criticism of the book is that the title is misleading if you think that the "music business" has aspects other than major label pop music recording.

BobRogers Thu, 03/22/2007 - 09:49

I second the recommendation for Passman's book. It is very clearly written and it is accurate on the topics that I know enough about to be able to check. He is very good on copyright, publishing rights, and mechanical rights.

My only criticism of the book is that the title is misleading if you think that the "music business" has aspects other than major label pop music recording.