User User name Password  
   
Sunday 8.11.2009 / 04:02 PM
Search AfterDawn.com:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > news > songwriters & composers challenge bpi
Show topics
News
News

Songwriters & composers challenge BPI

3 December 2005 14:21 by James "Dela" Delahunty | 3 comments

Songwriters & composers challenge BPI British composers and songwriters hit back at the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) yesterday in the battle over royalties from music download sales. Music downloads are just a small fraction of the overall music market currently, but in coming years music downloading will become a multi-billion dollar industry. The BPI, who's members includes big shots such as Sony BMG, Universal, EMI and Time Warner, wants to cut the royalties songwriters receive per 79p download by half.

That means instead of the current 5p per download, songwriters will get just 2.5p. Songwriters and composers were not willing to just sit back and let that happen however. The Music Alliance, a body representing some 44,000 songwriters and composers through the Performing Rights Society and the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society lodged a counter-claim yesterday demanding an increase in royalties to between 7p and 9p per download.

The group also challenged the record labels to reveal just how much money they are currently receive from digital downloads. The Music Alliance has said that if the BPI gets what it wants, then BPI members would receive 40p - 50p per download whereas composers and song writers will get just a few pennies. "We have now submitted our reasons for why the record industry should adopt fresh economic thinking in a digital age to sustain the composing community upon which they rely." said Adam Singer, head of the Music Alliance.

Source:
Independent Online


Permalink to this article

Get AfterDawn's news to your favourite feed reader! Share this story with your friends!
 

 
Related articles:

  • BPI claims file-sharing decline in UK (5 April 2006)
  • BPI criticises Napster and Apple for advertising on 'pirate sites' (14 October 2005)
  • UK's National Consumer Council criticises BPI over lawsuits (8 October 2005)
  • Worldwide legal music downloads tripled (21 July 2005)
  •  

    « Previous news article
    Another lawsuit filed against Sony
    Next news article »
    US and EU to fight intellectual property violations
     Post your comment
    Discuss this article! 
    yeardley (Junior Member) 3 December 2005 17:10 Send private message to this user   
    I like the idea behind their counter-claim, but come on, they really should have just gone all the way:

    "Sorry? You want to reduce my share from 5p down to 2.5p? Right -- tell you what, kick it up to 78p, you keep 1p, and we'll call it a day."

    Honestly, if these composers and songwriters could put the needles and pipes down for one day and put their brains to work, they would have hired a few programmers, web-designers, attorneys and office-lackeys to build their own network of sites a long time ago...in a system where they host their own music, collect 100% of the revenue, and after paying the above-mentioned employees, they take home what they really deserve for producing the content that is being purchased in the first place.

    Attention all musicians! Grow some balls!
    A_Klingon (Moderator) 3 December 2005 18:53 Send private message to this user   
    Dear musicians:

    We support YOU! We do not support the megacorps.

    Dear musicians:

    We want to pay YOU! Not the megacorps.

    Dear Musicians:

    Without you, there ARE NO greedy megacorps! They are very dead *without* you. WE are blessed *because* of you!

    Please help us to help you. If you can, please - as a first step - try to set up an independant website.

    God bless musicians - all of you!
    Lethal_B (Moderator) 4 December 2005 4:45 Send private message to this user   
    Good point. If I were a *decent* musician. there's no way I would stand for that. They could run it themselves and ultimately sell them for only 50p per download- and make ten times what they do now!
     Post your comment
     

    Subscribe to our newsfeed

    Get the latest headlines delivered directly to your favourite RSS reader or content aggregation service by using the links below.

    AfterDawn.com: News - RSS feed
    Add to Google
    Add to My Yahoo!
    Add to MyMSN

    Search for headlines

    Search through our news archive.

    Last week's most popular software downloads

    Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
    Music: MP3Lizard.com
    Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
    Software: Software downloads
    Blogs: User profile pages
    RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
    International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | download.fi
    Navigate: Search | Site map
    About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
    Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
     
      © 1999-2009 by AfterDawn Ltd.