The Ultimate Guide To Publishing
The Ultimate Guide To Publishing
The Ultimate Guide To Publishing
PART 1:
PAGE 2
INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC PUBLISHING
PART 2:
OVERVIEW OF MUSIC COPYRIGHTS PAGE 4
MASTER VS. COMPOSITION
PART 3:
OVERVIEW OF MUSIC PUBLISHING ROYALTIES PAGE 7
MECHANICAL VS. PUBLIC PERFORMANCE
PART 4:
PAGE 11
PERFORMANCE RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS
PART 5:
PAGE 14
THE STATE OF MUSIC PUBLISHING INDUSTRY
PART 6:
THE ROLE OF A MUSIC PUBLISHER PAGE 17
& HOW THEY HELP
PART 7:
TERMS YOU MUST KNOW PAGE 19
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
PART 8:
PAGE 41
RESOURCES
PART 9:
PAGE 42
ABOUT BEATSTARS PUBLISHING
INTRODUCTION
TO MUSIC PUBLISHING
INTRODUCTION
TO MUSIC PUBLISHING
Music publishing is the work of making sure that songwriters and composers get
paid for their songs, and also make sure that their songs are heard. Music publishers
ensure that songwriters receive royalties for their compositions, and also work
to generate opportunities for those compositions to be performed, heard, and
reproduced.
Music publishing existed long before recording mediums came around. In the early
20th century, sheet music publishing pretty much ran the industry — publishers
were involved with putting compositions on paper, producing songbooks,
distributing them to stores where royalties are collected from sales.
The ability to generate, collect, and account for income from the copyright was the
crux of the difficulty in the Music Publishing Industry. However, new technology and
accounting practices have streamlined the collection of Music Publishing.
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OVERVIEW OF
MUSIC COPYRIGHTS
MASTER VS. COMPOSITION
OVERVIEW OF MUSIC COPYRIGHTS
MASTER VS. COMPOSITION
For example, the song “Waves” and the sound recording of Kanye West singing
“Waves” are two distinct works. The song itself (i.e., the music and the lyrics) is a
musical composition, and a recording of an artist performing that song is a sound
recording.
The Copyright Act defines sound recordings as “works that result from the
fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds but not including sounds
accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work.” Generally, a sound
recording is a recorded performance, often of another work. A sound recording
must be fixed, meaning that the sounds must be captured in a medium from which
they can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated. The author may fix
the sounds in a digital track, disk, tape, or other format.
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OVERVIEW OF MUSIC COPYRIGHTS
MASTER VS. COMPOSITION
The music copyright is acquired by the author as soon as they meet two conditions:
a work of authorship is created and it’s fixed in a tangible medium. This will allow the
copyright holder to reproduce and distribute the musical work, perform or display
the musical work publicly, and create derivative works based on the musical work.
In 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that you must register your copyright in the US
Copyright Office before you can sue for infringement of the copyright. If you register
your copyright prior to an infringement, or within three months of the infringement,
you can recover your attorney’s fees and costs and, as opposed to having to prove
your actual damages, you can recover statutory damages of between $750 and
$30,000 per work per infringement, which can be increased to $150,000 per work if
the infringement is willful.
On February 24, 2022, In a 6–3 decision in Unicolors, Inc. v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz L.P.,
No. 20-915 slip op. (S.Ct. Feb. 24, 2022), the United States Supreme Court stated that
a certificate of registration is valid even though it contains inaccurate information
so long as the copyright holder lacked knowledge that it was inaccurate. That
lack of knowledge of either fact or law can excuse an inaccuracy in a copyright
registration. This decision has given creators even more flexibility to file copyright
registrations and know that simple mistakes will not invalidate their registrations.
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OVERVIEW OF MUSIC
PUBLISHING ROYALTIES
MECHANICAL VS. PUBLIC PERFORMANCE
OVERVIEW OF MUSIC PUBLISHING ROYALTIES
MECHANICAL VS. PUBLIC PERFORMANCE
MECHANICAL ROYALTIES
According to BMI, Mechanical royalties in the music industry are payments made
to songwriters and composers of a musical work when their composition is
reproduced mechanically, such as on vinyl records. Mechanical Royalties refers to
per-unit payments made by the record company to the music publisher for the
reproduction of copyrighted musical compositions appearing on CDs, cassette
tapes, vinyl albums, digital downloading, and digital streaming. Each time a
listener purchases, downloads, or streams a sound recording, publishers receive
a mechanical royalty payment, then that royalty payment is passed on to the
songwriter.
These are paid by the record label to the publisher (either directly or through a third
party organization such as Harry Fox Agency in the US). In the US, royalty rates are
set by the government through a compulsory license and are 1) either calculated
on a penny basis per song for physical/download, or 2) based on a formula for
interactive streaming services. Satellite and online radio such as Pandora or Sirius
do not pay mechanical royalties to publishers. In most countries outside of the US,
royalties are based on percentages of wholesale/consumer prices for physical/
digital products respectively and negotiated on an industry-wide basis.
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OVERVIEW OF MUSIC PUBLISHING ROYALTIES
MECHANICAL VS. PUBLIC PERFORMANCE
The term “mechanical royalty” actually goes back to the early 1900s, when
Congress deemed it necessary to pay a music publishing company for the right to
mechanically reproduce a musical composition on a player-piano roll. As a result,
music publishers began issuing “mechanical licenses” to, and collecting mechanical
royalties from, piano-roll manufacturers. While obviously the means of transmitting
music have gone through numerous changes since, the term “mechanical” has
stuck. Under current law, the first recorded version of a song — and its distribution
to the public — is only considered authorized and legal if the copyright owner has
given his consent to such transmissions. The download provider must first obtain
a mechanical license from the publisher or copyright owner before transmitting or
distributing the song.
Growing out of the mechanical license was the compulsory mechanical license,
which is a mandatory mechanical license issued on behalf of the copyright owners
after the public release of the first recording of that musical composition. Once a
song has been recorded and released to the public in an authorized, legal fashion,
another party may re-record (or “cover”) the same composition by obtaining a
compulsory mechanical license.
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OVERVIEW OF MUSIC PUBLISHING ROYALTIES
MECHANICAL VS. PUBLIC PERFORMANCE
While mechanicals are often paid directly to the publisher, they are sometimes
paid through collection services of a mechanical rights agency, such as the Harry
Fox Agency, which is the licensing subsidiary of the National Music Publishers’
Association. With HFA, the publisher is charged a commission of approximately 4.5%
of the gross mechanical royalties collected. In either case, the collected royalties
are then split between the publisher and the copyright owner, following their own
songwriting agreement.
It should be noted that, in nearly every country outside the U.S., the music publisher
does not have the ability to collect mechanical royalties directly from the labels.
Instead, labels are often required to pay royalties to a collection rights society, to
which the publisher must belong in order to receive those royalties. Sub-publishers
are frequently involved, working on behalf of the original publisher by joining
the society in question, directly registering the song, and collecting the royalties
before disbursing the monies to the original publisher. As a result, payments to the
songwriters can take up to a year or more.
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PERFORMANCE /
BROADCAST ROYALTIES
PERFORMANCE / BROADCAST ROYALTIES
Public performances happen all the time like when a restaurant plays background
music or if you’re listening to your favorite songs on Spotify. Composers get paid
every time their compositions are publicly performed.
In 1941, the DOJ placed “Consent Decrees” on both ASCAP and BMI because they
feared that the original PROs were getting too powerful. The Consent Decrees
dictate how ASCAP and BMI can license music in their repertoires as well as how
much they can charge in licensing fees. The Consent Decrees limit how they can
license the music in their repertoires; ASCAP and BMI must provide “100% licenses”
to broadcasters. The Consent Decrees prevent PROS from collecting Sync Licensing
Fees and Mechanical Royalty Fees.
Songwriters must register with a PRO independently of publishers. PROs credit half
of a song to songwriters and half to the publishers. “Songwriters are only allowed
to join one [PRO], so they must register all of their works with that one [PRO]. For
instance, if a songwriter joins BMI, then BMI exclusively represents that songwriter’s
entire catalog.” Publishers must also register with PROs. When a publisher joins a
PRO, that one PRO is responsible for collecting royalties for the publisher’s entire
catalog. Unlike songwriters, who can only register with one PRO, publishers must
register with every PRO. Registering with every PRO allows publishers to claim
their half of the royalties from every PRO, regardless of which PRO their affiliated
songwriter joined. This ensures that publishers can collect royalties on behalf of
every songwriter in their catalog.
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PERFORMANCE / BROADCAST ROYALTIES
STREAMING PLATFORMS
(i.e. Spotify)
10-50%
PUBLISHER
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THE STATE OF THE MUSIC
PUBLISHING INDUSTRY
THE STATE OF THE MUSIC PUBLISHING INDUSTRY
According to the Impforum’s 2021 Report, in 2020, the total global value of the music
copyright business was 28.6 Billion Euros. This figure represents the full value of
global music copyright, from both recording and publishing, including performance
rights, mechanical royalties, and sync licensing. More than half of this total, 64.9%, is
generated by the recording industry, while the remaining 35.1% comes from music
publishers, songwriters, and composers.
Global Music Collections fell 10% in 2020 due to COVID-19, and global music
publishing revenue totaled approximately 8.18 Billion Euros. Surprisingly,
independent Music Publishers accounted for 28% of the Music Publishing Market.
TV and radio remain the largest music publishing royalty payment sector, supplying
39.7% of total global publishing revenue, the equivalent of 3.252 Billion Euros in 2020.
Digital revenue, for the first time, was the second-largest source of music creator
revenue globally. The combined effect generated a growth of 16.2% in digital music
revenue and helped to reduce the impact of the collapse of live and background
music.
Live and background music at stores, clubs, bars, hotels, and other general licensing
users accounts for 18.2% of total collections, a sum of 2.62 Billion Dollars in 2020.
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THE STATE OF THE MUSIC PUBLISHING INDUSTRY
The United States had the largest income by society, totaling 2.209 Billion
1 Euros.
France had the second largest society in revenue though SACEM, totaling
2 902 Million Euros.
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THE ROLE OF
A MUSIC PUBLISHER
& HOW THEY HELP
THE ROLE OF A MUSIC PUBLISHER
& HOW THEY HELP
In order to collect royalties and distribute musical works all around the World,
“songwriters” work with music publishers. Whenever broadcasters and licensees
use musical works commercially, they owe royalties to the songwriters. Publishers
secure the commercial licenses and royalties. Publishers also collect “performance
royalties,” “mechanical royalties,” and “synchronization royalties. “Synchronization’’
or “sync” royalties are paid to songwriters/publishers and record labels/artists for
use of a song as background music for a movie, TV programme or commercial,
video game, etc. There is no explicit rate that defines the compulsory percentage of
royalty that must be paid. This will mostly depend on the commercial value of the
work to those who want it and on the media to be used. Sync royalties are usually
equally split between labels, artists, publishers and songwriters.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
ADMINISTRATOR
The person or company that administers the rights to your composition and
will only [take] — depending on the terms, from 10 to 25%. They don’t own your
composition, you still own the composition. The difference between a publisher and
an administrator is that a traditional publisher will require all your rights. They own
the composition and, hopefully, they’ve paid you some money for that. A film and TV
publisher is sort of in-between an administrator and a regular publisher, but an
administrator basically handles all the paperwork, which is the international
collections and the registrations. They’re listed as the publisher on any cue sheets,
and have 100%. Once they collect that 100%, they will forward 75% to 90% to you,
depending on your agreement. An administrator is useful for very large commercial
artists whose name carries their song. So if they don’t want to hand it over to a
publisher to handle their songs — that is, if they haven’t already signed from way
back — an administrator is great for them because they don’t have to do the leg
work or [deal with] getting paid or the international collections. The administrator
will handle all that. A good administrator will also pitch your music to film and TV, but
their main job is to collect and do all the paperwork for you worldwide.
ADVANCE
The money paid to an artist or songwriter before the recording or release of a song
or recorded work. The amount of the advance is typically deducted from future
royalties generated by that song or recording and earned by the artist.
AIR CHECK
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
A&R
An abbreviation for Artists and Repertoire; The act of finding new talent, songs and
masters. Record labels use A&R people to find new talent, sign artists, find them the
best songs for their recording project, and shepherd the process of recording their
music.
ARRANGER
One who adapts a musical work to particular instruments or voices, which can also
include the re-arrangement of the song’s structure.
ARTIST MANAGER
The person or company in charge of the task of developing an artist’s career. The
artist manager typically advises the artist on all business decisions and works to
promote the artist through any and all available means, including demos, media
coverage, and person-to-person networking. Managers also work to exploit
any and all of the artist’s work to develop revenue streams for the artist. Typical
management deals give 10-25% of the artist’s income to the manager. 15-20% is the
most typical range.
ARTIST
A.S.C.A.P.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
ASSIGNMENT
The transfer of rights to a song or catalog from one copyright holder to another.
The AIMP includes in its membership not only independent music publishers,
but those publishers that are affiliated with record labels or motion picture and
television production companies. In addition, individuals from other areas of the
entertainment community, such as motion picture, television, multimedia, and
home video producers, the record industry, music licensing and supervision,
songwriters, artist managers, and members of the legal and accounting professions
are active in the Association of Independent Music Publishers.
AUTHOR
A common term to describe the performance royalties a creator gets from his or
her Performance Rights Organization (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC in the U.S.) when a piece of
the creators music is played on radio, TV, etc. A Sync Fee is the money paid upfront
to license the music for a TV show (for instance), while the Performance Royalty or
backend is paid quarterly after the music has been played publically. It is notable
that Performance Royalties or Backend is not paid in the United States when music
in a film is played in a movie theater. However, if that same film is broadcast on TV,
backend Performance Royalties will be paid for that.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
BLANKET LICENSE
A type of broad license that allows the end user (such as a TV network) to use any or
all of the songs in a Performance Rights Organization’s repertory as much or as little
as they like. Licensees typically pay a large annual fee for the license. The blanket
license reduces paperwork, and reduces the effort in finding and negotiating
licenses with all of the individual copyright owners of the works that might be used.
Music libraries often contract for blanket license deals with a particular show or
network for a lump sum, annual fee. The network or show gets a hard drive with
thousands of songs and/or instrumental tracks on it, and the music supervisors
and/or show’s video and music editors can use as much music from that hard
drive as they like during a given year. Some music libraries or publishers pay the
composers whose music is on the hard drive by giving them a proportionate
amount of the upfront fee, determined by how much their music is ultimately
used. Other publishers keep all of the upfront fee, and the composers are only
compensated through performance royalties when their songs or tracks are listed
on the show’s cue sheet(s).
BMI
BOOKING AGENT
A person who finds employment for artists or performers in return for a percentage
of the income from that employment, usually ranging from 10 to 15%. They can also
be known as talent agents.
BPM
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
BROADCAST QUALITY
Being sonically good enough to be broadcast in its current state. In other words,
not a demo recording. Broadcast Quality is a subjective measure of audio quality,
and the quality of the musical performance to some degree. The term is most often
thought of in regard to the recording or audio quality, but if the audio is high quality
but the musicianship or performance is less than wonderful, a piece of music might
still not be considered Broadcast Quality. Conversely, if the style of music is typically
ragged, distorted, or “under-performed,” it could have a less than stellar audio and
performance quality, but still be Broadcast Quality in the context of that style or
genre.
BUSINESS MANAGER
A person (or company) that manages the income, expenses, and investments of a
performer or artist. A business manager usually charges an artist 2-5% of his or her
income for the services rendered.
CATALOG
The right of a radio station, TV network, or film production to play a song. To say that
a song has been “cleared,” means that there is nothing to prevent a song or track
from being used. Undisclosed copyright holders, or lack of signed work-for-hire
agreements could be obstacles that prevent a song or track from being “cleared.”
Music supervisors will not license a song for a film or TV placement if it doesn’t
“clear.”
COLLABORATOR
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
COMMISSION
The natural protection of a song based on common laws of the various states. Was
superseded by a single national system effective January 1, 1978.
COMPOSER
COMPOSITION
COMPULSORY LICENSE
The statutory mandate given to a copyright owner to permit third parties to make
sound recordings of the copyright owner’s song after it has been recorded.
CO-PUBLISHING
The joint publication of one copyrighted work by two publishers. When a songwriter
or composer assigns half of his or her publisher’s share of a copyright to another
entity — typically a music publishing company — they are said to have entered into
a co-publishing deal.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
COPYRIGHT
The exclusive rights granted to authors of copyrightable song, allowing the author
to have control over that song and how it is (or is not) exploited for financial gain.
COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT
The unauthorized use of a copyrighted work. Copyright law calls for the plaintiff
to prove the defendant infringed their copyright through a three-part test: 1) Did
the defendant have access to the copyrighted work? 2) Did the defendant copy,
directly from the copyrighted work, a part of the song that is protected by copyright
(some parts of songs or musical compositions are not protected by copyright, such
as titles; themes and ideas; and stock chord progressions, such as a I-IV-V blues
progression.) 3) Is the defendant’s composition substantially similar to that of the
plaintiff’s composition?
COPYRIGHT NOTICE
COPYRIGHT OFFICE
The Copyright Office is part of the U.S. Library of Congress in Washington D.C., where
copyrights are registered and filed in both physical and electronic files.
COVER
Another artist’s version of a song that has already been recorded by a previous
artist.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
CO-WRITING
CROSS COLLATERALIZATION
A means of recouping the money spent on one song or recording against the
earnings of another song or recording.
CROSSOVER
A song that receives airplay in more than one market, chart, radio format, or genre.
CUE
While the word “cue” has many meanings depending on the context, the most
common meaning for TV and film music is; a musical work created to fill a spot
in a TV show or film. An instrumental cue would play in the background or under
dialogue in a reality TV show, for instance. A cue could also mean a “spot” in which a
piece of music is needed and will be inserted in a film or TV show.
CUE SHEET
A log or spreadsheet of all music used in a TV show or film, listing each individual
use, where in the show or film it is used, the duration of the use, the type of use (ie.
background, feature, etc.), and the composer(s) and the publisher(s). The cue sheet
is often filled out by the TV show’s editor or assistant editor, then given to the show’s
producer, and/or network, and ultimately to the appropriate performing rights
organization, which in turn collects and distributes the money to the composers
and publishers.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
DAW
Digital Audio Workstation. The computer used to run recording and music creation
software.
DEMO
DEVELOPMENTAL ARC
Much like a movie script or a novel, music can also have a developmental arc.
While the term could be applied to songs and instrumentals, it is most often used
in the context of instrumental cues, which are typically comprised of an “A” section
repeated throughout the entire piece of music, sometimes with a “B” section
included as well to add some variation within the instrumental’s main theme. The
developmental arc refers to how the track builds as it moves forward, oftentimes
adding or subtracting layers of new instrumentation to create some dynamic
interest, and most importantly, the sense that the piece is developing and moving
forward to a crescendo-like conclusion (often referred to as a stinger).
DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION
DISCOGRAPHY
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
DISTRIBUTOR
A company that handles the sales and shipment of a record company’s product to
retail outlets and one-stops for a certain territory defines what a distributor is in the
physical media realm. A company that distributes music via electronic means using
digitally encoded files is considered to be a digital distributor.
ENTERTAINMENT LAW
A specialty area of commercial law that looks after the needs pertaining to music,
theatre, sports, dance, literature, architecture, visual arts, Internet and television
industries.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
The Harry Fox Agency represents music publishers for their mechanical and
digital licensing needs. The agency issues mechanical licenses and collects and
distributes royalties on their affiliated publisher’s behalf. This includes licensing for
the recording and reproduction of CDs, ringtones, and Internet downloads. HFA no
longer issues synchronization (or sync) licenses for the use of music in advertising,
movies, music videos, and television programs, but they do collect and distribute
synch licenses that were granted prior to the discontinuation of the sync service
in 2002. HFA also conducts royalty examinations, investigates and negotiates new
business opportunities, and pursues piracy claims.
Issue print rights that are required to change the lyrics, or to publish
them in printed form.
Issue master use rights that permit the use of an original artist recording.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
HFA is often confused with the performing rights societies, ASCAP, BMI and SESAC.
Performing rights are separate and apart from mechanical rights, and are
necessary to obtain for public performance of copyrighted music, such as at
concerts, radio and television broadcasts, and the like. We suggest you contact
these companies if you are interested in any performance rights or synch licenses.
These companies also represent songwriters and publishers for the placement
of their music in films and for use by other performers. We suggest you contact
these companies if you are interested in only performance rights, synch licenses, or
clearance for the use of samples. HFA does not provide any of these services.
Neither HFA nor the performing rights companies issue the rights for
printed lyric reproduction.
For “master use” or sampling rights, you will also need to contact the
owner of the master recording, usually the record company that issued
the original recording.
INDIE
Music industry slang for “independent.” The term is vague and is used variously
to refer to small record labels, small publishing companies, artists signed to
these labels and publishers, and unsigned artists who act as their own labels and
publishers.
LICENSE
When used as a noun, it means a legal permit. When used as a verb, it is to authorize
by legal permit. In the music industry context, it means to grant permission for one
person or company to use or perform another person’s song or instrumental track.
LICENSOR
The owner of the licensed musical work. The songwriter or composer who creates
the song or track is often the licensor. A publisher who has acquired the rights to the
song or composition can also be the licensor.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
LICENSEE
The person or entity to whom the work is licensed. The end user, such as a TV show
or feature film that licenses a song or composition is a licensee because they have
licensed the right to use that musical work.
MANAGER
MARKETING
MASTER
The original master recording. The original media type or form, from which dubs
or copies are made. It also refers to a finished recording of the song from which
records are pressed and distributed to radio stations and record stores.
MASTERING
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
MECHANICAL RIGHTS
A right given, allowing the mass reproduction of a song on CDs, tapes, records or
other forms of physical media.
MECHANICAL ROYALTIES
The payment from a record company to a songwriter or publisher for use of a song
on a CD or other physical media. These payments are referred to as “mechanicals.”
The statutory mechanical royalty rate of 9.10 cents per song/per unit sold took
effect January 1, 2006. If a song is more than five minutes long, the rate paid will be
increased to 1.75 cents per minute. See also — The Harry Fox Agency.
METADATA
MIDI
The abbreviation for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. MIDI is a standard digital
language/interface that enables electronic instruments and editing devices
(synthesizers, computers, drums machines, etc.) to communicate with each other.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
MIXDOWN
The final audio product combining all of the separate music elements and
instruments into one composite soundtrack. “Mix” also applies to the act of creating
the mix. This is sometimes referred to as the “mixdown.”
MUSIC CATALOG
MUSIC LIBRARY
Music Libraries (aka Production Music Libraries) are music publishers that generally
specialize in licensing music to media projects like TV shows, films, TV commercials,
corporate videos, streaming videos, etc. Both instrumental tracks and full songs
with lyrics can be licensed from music libraries, depending on which company
you license the music from. Music libraries can range from very small, one-person
companies with a few hundred pieces of music in their catalog, up to very large
companies with dozens of staff members and hundreds of thousands of songs and
instrumentals in their catalog. Songwriters, artists, and composers can have their
music in several different catalogs, and they typically sign publishing agreements
that are either exclusive (only one company can represent a particular piece of
music) or non-exclusive (the same piece of music can be re-titled and represented
by several companies). If you were to hear an instrumental track (aka a cue) in a
reality TV show, there’s a very high likelihood it came from a music library. A song
(with lyrics and vocal) could come from a music library as well, or it might also
come from a big publisher and/or record label, depending on how large or famous
the artist or song is. Independent artists’ songs would most likely come from a music
library.
MUSIC LICENSING
The act of licensing a musical work for placement in various forms of media.
Wikipedia defines Music Licensing as follows: Music licensing is the licensed use
of copyrighted music. Music licensing is intended to ensure that the owners of
copyrights on musical works are compensated for certain uses of their work. A
purchaser has limited rights to use the work without a separate agreement.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
MUSIC PLACEMENT
When used as a verb, it is the act of placing (or licensing) a musical work (song
or instrumental) in a form of media, typically visual media like TV shows, films,
advertising/TV commercials, video games, etc. When used as a noun, Music
Placement refers to a specific placement of a musical work.
MUSIC PUBLISHER
Music publishers exploit the licensing and commercial use of copyrighted songs,
and also collect the payments for the use of those songs. The copyrights must be
assigned to the music publisher or by the songwriters in a written contract in return
for a percentage of royalties generated by the song.
Companies that exploit copyrights of songs to generate income for the songwriter
or composer and the publishing company as well.
MUSIC SUPERVISOR
A music supervisor pairs music with visual media of all types. According to The Guild
of Music Supervisors, a music supervisor is “a qualified professional who oversees all
music related aspects of film, television, advertising, video games and other existing
or emerging visual media platforms as required.”
Organizations that collect the payment for licensed public performances of songs
on behalf of the copyright owners, and pays royalties to the songwriters and
publishers of the performed works. There are three organizations in the U.S. (among
many others worldwide) that do this: ASCAP, BMI and SESAC.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
PERFORMANCE ROYALTIES
The income earned from use of one’s song on radio, television, concerts, and other
public performances of music.
PLATINUM ALBUM
PLATINUM SINGLE
The certification by the Recording Industry Association of America that a single has
sold a minimum of one million units.
POINTS
Percentage points — the money producers and artists earn on the retail list price
of 90 percent of all records sold. The term can broadly apply to any percentage
earned in the music industry. “The producer got two points (2% of sales) on that
record.”
PROFESSIONAL MANAGER
The person in charge of screening new material for music publishers and of
obtaining commercial recordings of songs in his publishing company’s catalog. Not
to be confused with artist manager.
PUBLIC DOMAIN
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
PUBLISHER
RECORD LABEL
RECORDING CONTRACTS
The legal documents detailing an agreement between a record label and recording
artist, whether on a major record label or independent label.
RETITLING
REVERSION CLAUSE
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
ROYALTY
SAMPLE CLEARANCE
SCORING
The process of composing and recording the instrumental music added to help fill
scenes or dialogue in a movie, TV show, or Broadway play.
S.E.S.A.C.
SONG PLUGGER
The person who is charged with getting meetings with executives at record labels
and with record producers for the purpose of pitching the songs written by the
songwriters he or she represents.
SONGWRITING
The process of writing the words and melody that make up a song. Song structure
and the arrangement are also part of the process.
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
SUBPUBLISHER
The company that publishes a song or catalog in a territory other than that under
the domain of the original publisher.
The right granted by copyright owners that allow for a song to be recorded on a
soundtrack for TV or Films, or to be used as background music within a TV show or
movie. The on-screen images are often synchronized with the song, thus the phrase
synchronization rights.
TERM OF COPYRIGHT
The amount of time that a copyright is in effect. Copyright protection does not
last forever. A copyright has a “term” or length, depending on when the work itself
was created. For works created after January 1, 1978, the term of copyright is the
life of the author (or last surviving author) plus 70 years or, if the work is a Work-
for-Hire, the term is 95 years from first Publication or 120 years from creation,
whichever expires first. For works published or registered prior to January 1st, 1978,
the term of copyright is 95 years. Copyright owners also have the right to assign
their copyrights to their heirs or any other person or business. It is the right and
responsibility of those parties to find ways to exploit the song, should the previous
publishing contracts or licensing agreements expire.
VERSE
The section of a song or instrumental that precedes the chorus. Typically, it is the
A section of a song using the AABA arrangement. The Verse follows the song’s intro
and is usually the first part of the song to have a vocal in it. The first Verse’s lyrics
often sets up the song’s story line. The second Verse lyric often completes the story.
WET
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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW
MUSIC INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
WORK-FOR-HIRE
A form of copyright that removes ownership from the actual author of a work.
According to the Copyright Act, in the case of work-for-hire, the work belongs to the
employer of the actual author, since the work was done within the scope of his/her
job. Copyright cannot be legally assigned to the employer without a signed, written
contract stating that the author relinquishes the copyright; verbal agreements
will not hold up in court. The work-for-hire clause often refers to advertising jingle
writers more than songwriters, although, it is often used in contracts by production
music libraries that do “Buy Out” deals with composers and songwriters.
WORK
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RESOURCES
• https://www.bmi.com/news/entry/Understanding_Mechanical_Royalties
• https://www.mondaq.com/unitedstates/copyright/788820/us-supreme-court-
holds-that-copyrights-must-be-registered-in-order-to-sue-for-infringement
• https://secure.harryfox.com/songfile/faq.jsp
• https://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ50.pdf
• https://tarzaneconomics.com/undercurrents/copyright
• https://www.ifpi.org/ifpi-issues-annual-global-music-report-2021/
• https://www.taxi.com/music-industry-glossary/
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ABOUT BEATSTARS PUBLISHING
BeatStars has always been about putting money back into the hands of creators,
which is why BeatStars Publishing is the first publishing company to offer worldwide
80/20 splits. Our dedicated Publishing team works to collect royalties and payment
to ensure members securely receive their deserved pay.
BeatStars Publishing is a vital hub for music producers and recording artists to
register and monetize their work and immerse themselves in career-changing
opportunities.
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