Monday, July 25, 2011

Free Music Understanding Royalty

By Courtney Rogers


The music industry has many different types of people involved in it that all want some of the action which can make it very complicated. One piece of music can be connected to many different kinds of revenue streams and there can be several groups of people collecting a fee for using it. This is the reason that it can be very expensive and time consuming to gain the rights for the use of a musical composition for commercial purposes.

Commercial music can be defined as the use of music to help with the promotion of services or products in a public setting. For example, when you purchase music from iTunes, your license covers your listening personally. Personal use means that it's intended for your listening personally. If you add track(s) to a podcast that's receiving numerous hits it's not personal use. If you do this, you're setting yourself up for all types of royalties and/or fees.

Commercial audio has many fees that are associated with it. If you want to use the music commercially, these fees are all mandatory. The royalty fees that must be bought or all musical tracks include: neighboring rights; master use rights; publishing rights; transcription and synchronization rights; public performance rights, and; mechanical rights.

One iTunes track you purchased for less than $1.00 might wind up costing many thousands of dollars for a simple use. The fact is that some popular music tracks have been known to cost as much as a million dollars for the use of one song for only a short time.

As a result of the fact that they will allow you to play one song for all of the royalties, rights, and fees associated with that song, stock music catalogs have made buying music for commercial purposes much simpler. There is some stock music libraries that are known as royalty free, since most of the royalties, fee, and rights are purchased for a one time use.

There are still some misconceptions about what precisely stock audio is, especially with regard to music that is royalty free, although royalty free and stock audio aren't new concepts.

iStockphoto is one example is a photo that is royalty free. You can use the photo for any amount of time for one purchase price. The concept of music that is royalty free is equally simple. However, most music that is royalty free can be to more than one royalty.




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