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Interesting article in The New York Times today:

OLD SONGS GENERATE NEW CASH FOR ARTISTS

By Ben Sisario

Three years ago, the singer and songwriter Suzanne Vega received a $41 payment from an agency called SoundExchange. It was so small she did not notice it in the accounting from her manager. The next year the payment was bigger, and bigger still the year after that.

"Now it's up to $800," she said by telephone from her home in Manhattan. "I wasn't even aware of it until recently."

The money Ms. Vega received was royalties earned from satellite and Internet radio, a growing source of income that many artists and record labels are just beginning to notice.

The amount paid by SoundExchange, the sole collector and distributor of these royalties, is a fraction of what is made in royalties by composers and publishers from traditional radio, but it has grown significantly in recent years with the rise and expansion of the satellite radio services XM and Sirius.

The main difference with the new royalties, though, is that they are paid not to composers and publishers but to the performers - the singers and musicians in a song - and the copyright holder of the recording, which in most cases is a record label.

SoundExchange, a nonprofit agency in Washington, is authorized by the United States Copyright Office to collect royalties from digital broadcasters and pay them directly to performing artists. Founded in 2000 and initially part of the Recording Industry Association of America, SoundExchange made its first payments in 2001 and, after a slow beginning, has begun to double its annual collections; in 2005 it expects to collect and allocate $35 million.

But the biggest obstacle the agency faces, it says, is getting the word out to artists and registering them for payment. These royalties for new and unfamiliar formats are a category of payment that performing artists in the United States have never had: a performance right.

"This is a brand-new right," said John Simson, the executive director of SoundExchange. "A lot of artists are unaware of it, and we're working against 80 years of a music industry without a performance right." (In Europe and elsewhere around the world, performing artists are paid a royalty for radio play, but because the United States has not paid the fee in the past, it has generally not been reciprocated by other countries.)

In a practice well known to musicians and record companies but obscure to the public at large, traditional radio - or "terrestrial radio," as it is now known in the music industry - pays a royalty only to a song's publishers and composers, not to its performers or the owners of the recording itself. "When a typical Beatles song gets played on traditional radio," Mr. Simson said, "John and Paul get paid royalties, but not George or Ringo."

Musicians and record labels have long complained of this arrangement. In the 1990's, two federal laws established a royalty for performers for Web and satellite radio and digital music services like Muzak, DMX and Music Choice. The Digital Performance Right in Sound Recordings Act of 1995 and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 established for the first time that the performers of a song and the copyright holder of the recording would be paid a special royalty separate from those paid to songwriters and publishers.

The rate for this royalty, set by the librarian of Congress, is 7 cents per song per 100 listeners, for most digital services. In the abbreviated nine-month accounting period of 2004, SoundExchange (which does not pay the composer or the publisher of a song; those royalties are paid by other agencies) distributed $17.5 million collected from satellite and Web broadcasters, Mr. Simson said.

That number is still tiny compared with the royalties paid from traditional radio - about $350 million a year, according to industry estimates - but it is growing fast. The two leading satellite radio systems, XM and Sirius, which began broadcasting in 2001 and 2002, respectively, added a substantial number of listeners this year. XM says it has more than two and a half million subscribers, and yesterday Sirius announced that it had passed one million subscribers.

Barry M. Massarsky, a music industry economist and a consultant for SoundExchange, predicted that total revenue from satellite radio alone would increase by 6 to 10 times over the next five years.

"Based on our research from August 2004," he wrote in an e-mail response to a question, "forecasts for satellite radio revenues alone eclipse $2 billion by 2008 and $3 billion by 2010." Current revenue estimates for satellite radio are about $300 million for 2004, he said. Most of the money comes from subscription fees.

But because of the novelty and unfamiliarity of the performance royalty, SoundExchange has had a difficult time getting artists to sign up for the service, and in many cases it is searching for performers to pay. The agency has a list of more than 30,000 artists to track down who are owed payments ranging from $50 to $5,000. Mr. Simson said.

Some of those artists, like D'Angelo, Nine Inch Nails and Men at Work, are well known and have just not filled out the necessary paperwork. But the whereabouts of many performers, particularly the ones no longer involved in the music business, are unknown. Among those being sought by SoundExchange are members of the 60's garage-rock bands the Beau Brummels and the Blues Magoos, the girl group the Shangri-Las, the young Italian singer Laura Pausini and the heirs of Dinah Washington and Mantovani.

SoundExchange had a deadline of Friday, to sign up artists for its first accounting period, covering Feb. 1, 1996, to March 31, 2000. But there were so many artists yet to be found that this month the agency's board voted to extend the deadline to July and maybe further, Mr. Simson said.

The details of payments for the performance royalty are still being fine tuned. By law, 50 percent of the royalty goes to the copyright holder of a recording, 45 percent goes to its "featured performer" and the remaining 5 percent goes to nonfeatured musicians like backup singers and session players. This distinction brings yet more complications for SoundExchange.

"There are recordings where it's unclear who is the featured performer," Mr. Simson said. "Like with rap, a song might be billed as Lil Jon featuring Usher featuring someone else. There might be two or three featured artists on the recording. Do we send all the money to one artist or divide it in three? Our preference is to have an artist tell us, but in many cases we don't know."

The new income stream from SoundExchange has taken many performers and record labels by pleasant surprise.

"It's like manna from heaven," said Bruce Iglauer, the president and founder of Alligator Records, an independent blues label in Chicago. He said the label's most recent payment from SoundExchange, received last month, was between $5,000 and $10,000.

"That's not a huge amount of money," he said, "but that'll pay the studio bill for a record."

The artists who stand to gain the most from a performance right are performers of pop classics and oldies standards who never received radio royalties before but, since hits from decades past stay in rotation, could collect significant amounts of money.

Carl Gardner, one of the original singers in the Coasters, sang on "Yakety Yak," "Charlie Brown," "Searchin'," "Poison Ivy" and other radio staples but did not write the songs, so he never collected a royalty when they were played on the radio. (Those songs were written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who own their own publishing rights.)

Now 76, Mr. Gardner lives in Port St. Lucie, Fla., with his wife, Veta, who is also his manager. She heard about SoundExchange and signed her husband up. Mr. Gardner said his first check from SoundExchange, a couple of years ago, was for about $300, and the amount has increased steadily since.

"It's peanuts," he said. "But every little bit helps."

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The deal with Sound Exchange applies to ALL radio stations streaming on the web. NPR stations, under a blanket negotiation with Soun Exchange, are allowed to pay a flat royalty rate as long as they adhere to some very stringent programming rules that limit the number of times the same artist may be played in a three hour period, how many times music from the same collection may be played, etc. The only way out of this is to get a waiver from the copyright owner though I'm finding Columbia, Verve, Capitol (Blue Note) and RCA (no response as yet) are not willing to give blanket waivers to radio to get out from under this ruling. I've been sending copyright waivers to record labels for about a month now. Actually, I should send one to you guys and Steve Talaga, too.

So, if I didn't get these waivers and went outside of the restrictions, we'd be liable for the "extra" royalty payments based on the per listener equation.

We're hoping to be streaming on the web beginging sometime in January.

Lazaro

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The deal with Sound Exchange applies to ALL radio stations streaming on the web. NPR stations, under a blanket negotiation with Soun Exchange, are allowed to pay a flat royalty rate as long as they adhere to some very stringent programming rules that limit the number of times the same artist may be played in a three hour period, how many times music from the same collection may be played, etc. The only way out of this is to get a waiver from the copyright owner though I'm finding Columbia, Verve, Capitol (Blue Note) and RCA (no response as yet) are not willing to give blanket waivers to radio to get out from under this ruling. I've been sending copyright waivers to record labels for about a month now. Actually, I should send one to you guys and Steve Talaga, too.

So, if I didn't get these waivers and went outside of the restrictions, we'd be liable for the "extra" royalty payments based on the per listener equation.

We're hoping to be streaming on the web beginging sometime in January.

Lazaro

How on earth does Jazz Profiles continue to air, then? Or any program that's devoted to a single artist? Do they have to go through the waiver process for every single show?

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See, there's the rub: each station is responsible for ALL of the programming they web cast, and has, by law, to report it to Sound Exchange. So, Jazz Profiles, Portraits in Blue and other single artist shows, or interview and music programs, make the STATION potentially liable for "extra" royalties above the agreed upon flat rate fee negotiated with Sound Exchange...Or, the station may have it's web casting statutory license revoked...Your money or your web casting, or play by the rules.

Since Blue Lake has featured a "Jazz Retrospecitve" format as the main "hook" for our listeners for more than 21 years, we will just not web cast that portion of the program. I'll do the first hour and a half of the show as "normal," that is, focus on a single artist for the first twenty minutes of each of the first two hours, and then the once we start web casting, go to the rules unless the content has been granted a waiver by the copyright owners (we have several so far).

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Here's part of a letter I wrote to a friend in broadcasting that includes the web streaming rules for radio....

I’ve been meaning to write to you about the Internet Streaming Regulations for some time...

I spoke to this man today and he cleared a lot of this up for me:

Gary R. Greenstein

Vice President, Business and Legal Affairs

Recording Industry Association of America, Inc.

1330 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 300

Washington, D.C. 20036

(w) 202.828.0126

© 202.302.2444

(f) 202.775.7253

These rules come out of a Federal Law passed by Congress in the 1990’s, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Sound Recording Performance Compliment, 17-USC-114 (j) (13) which lays out the rules for the transmission of copy righted material on the web. NPR made a private deal with a division of the RIAA called Sound Exchange which covers royalties for all member stations, but there are still certain statutory limits a web caster must comply with in order to retain their compulsory license to distribute sound recordings over the Internet.

These include,

1) The Internet service cannot be distributed on a subscription basis. 2) the Internet service cannot be interactive or “on-demand.” That means your service cannot allow listeners to select a particular recording, whether or not as part of a program. 3) You cannot publish or distribute a program schedule or list of the titles of the specific sound recordings that will be transmitted in advance. 4) There are limitations on the number of tracks you can play from the same CD, album or cassette (“CD”), limitations on the number of songs by the same artist, and limitations on how many songs from the same CD or artist can be transmitted consecutively. In any three (3) hour period you can transmit up to three (3) different selections of sound recordings from any one CD, but you can transmit no more than two (2) consecutively. Additionally, in any three (3) hour period you can transmit up to four (4) different selections of sound recordings from the same featured artist, or up to four (4) different selections of sound recordings from any set or compilation CD’s, but you can transmit no more than three (3) consecutively. 5) there are restrictions on the webcasting of continuous, looped programs of less than three hours duration and on the number of times that a program may be repeated during a two-week period. You can transmit a program that is longer than one hour and that includes performances of sound recordings up to four times in any two week period that have been publicly announced in advance. If the program is less than one hour long, you can transmit the program up to three times in any two week period that have been publicly announced in advance.

From NPR legal, as passed to me from WEMU, “The license from RIAA is contingent on station’s strict conformity with these provisions of the Digital Millennum Copyright Act. If you do not comply with the requirements, the license is void. Your station would be liable for damages for copyright infringement. Moreover, violations will create problems the next time we try to negotiate with the RIAA. While your station may not be so concerned, it is of great concern to many others relying on this, and future licenses. If you do not intend to abide by the terms of the licenses, you must not use them, and if you’re an NPR station, you must advise NPR. Your station’s name will be removed form the list of licensed stations that we provide to the RIAA and you will be operating without any license.”

Now, the good news: after speaking with Mr. Greenstein today I learned you can seek a WAIVER of the restrictions of the statutory license provisions of the Sound Recording Compliment from the copyright holder, provide a report of use to the Sound Exchange, and detail in a cover letter that you have these statutory license waivers. That is, write a letter to the labels servicing you and ask their permission to use their music outside of these restrictions during this time period on this program for this duration. Which is exactly what I’m going to do. It only needs to be a sentence. For me, given the amount of historical programming we do, this will be essential.

So that’s the story. Many stations outside of NPR are ignorant and in non-compliance of these laws. It’s really amazing.

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