Public domain music
Music is in the public domain as with any other work in the public domain:
- all rights have expired or
- the authors have explicitly put a work into the public domain
- there never were copyrights
In the United States of America, no sound recording will enter the public domain until 2067, unless explicitly placed into the public domain by its creators or the recording was made by an employee or officer of the United States Government acting under their official duty, such as a recording of The Washington Post march by the United States Marine Corp. band.[1]
Copyrights
For music the involved rights are:
- authors (composers, lyricists) - e.g. CISAC members, AR:SADAIC DE:GEMA GB:PRS US:SESAC BMI ASCAP
- performer
- mechanical rights e.g. BIEM members (mechanical rights collecting societies) AR:SADAIC DE:GEMA GB:MCPS US:HARRY-FOX
- BIEM is the international organisation representing mechanical rights societies. Mechanical rights societies exist in most countries. They license the reproduction of songs (including musical, literary and dramatic works). Their members are composers, authors and publishers and their clients are record companies and other users of recorded music. They also license mechanical aspects of the downloading of music via the Internet
- live performance DE:de:GVL
- mechanical rights e.g. BIEM members (mechanical rights collecting societies) AR:SADAIC DE:GEMA GB:MCPS US:HARRY-FOX
- publisher e.g. IFPI members AR:CAPIF, US:RIAA
See also
- List of public domain tangos
- Copyright Term Extension Act
- Wikipedia:Sound/list (not all pd)
- LibriVox, an online digital library of free public domain audiobooks.
- Copyright collective
- performance rights organisation
References
External links
- Sheet music
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This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 29, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.