I guess this has been discussed before but wondering about some street musicians that play and post on youtube copyright songs they play and are monetized, making big YT money.
Slippery slope. Most of the time cover songs are ok, if rights fees are paid. Depending on the song and artist, they can be contested and pulled down, or monetized and money goes to the rights holder. There are lots of different variables in copyrights. I doubt YouTube is paying rights fees for people to air cover songs. But I really don't know.
If you play a video with an original version of a song by the original artist, the money generated will go to the rights holder or you will be given a take down. Depends on the artist.
Because of the worldwide availability of YouTube, I don't really know how the cover song business works. If you play in a bar or club, the bar or club is supposed to pay the performing rights org (BMI, ASCAP etc) fees which then allows the music to be played. Plenty of people play songs on YouTube that are copyrighted and owned by someone else.
In this girl's case I believe she has recorded most of these and probably has a mechanical license to do so and also has permission to perform in public and earn from it. Speculation on my part though.
My wife asked if I had seen the dog bowl. I told her I didn't even know he could.
Understand too that what is legal and what you can get away with are not necessarily the same thing.
Byron Dickens
BIAB. CbB. Mixbus 32C 8 HP Envy. Intel core i7. 16GB RAM W10. Focusrite Scarlett 18i 20. Various instruments played with varying degrees of proficiency.
You can legally upload a cover and make money using this site We are the hits
LyricLab A.I assisted chords and lyric app. Export lyrics and import directly into Band-in-a-Box 2024. https://lyriclab.net Play-along with songs you know and love, download SGU files https://playiit.com/
You can legally upload a cover and make money using this site We are the hits
That's useful.
I did searches for four relatively obscure songs that I love and three of them were recognised.
Jazz relative beginner, starting at a much older age than was helpful. Kawai MP6, Korg M50, Ui24R, Saffire Pro 40. AVL:MXE Linux; Windows 11; Win8.1: Scarletts BIAB2022 UltraPAK, Reaper, a bunch of stuff.
Unless you have purchased the rights, Youtube monitizes your video and remits the income to the copyright owner. You have to show them that YOU have the rights for them to send you the income. If the copyright owner doesn't allow covers, Youtube removes it or doesn't post it in the first place. At least that's how I understand it works.
I posted a video of my farm with a couple of CCM songs as background music.... shortly after it was posted, I got notice of copyright and they monetized the video with commercials. Same deal on some other covers I posted.
You can find my music at: www.herbhartley.com Add nothing that adds nothing to the music. You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both.
The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
I have purchased the royalty free rights to a significant number of commercial backing tracks which my company uses in video promotional material. Another big and very well known music company apparently owns the company that I purchased the royalty free music rights from.
Some of the music phrases I use may only be seconds long.
Whenever a new video is placed on YouTube, almost immediately I get a challenge that I have violated copyright owned by that big music company. I explain that I have purchased the rights, with proof and the challenge is removed, but this usually takes several days.
What is amazing is how quickly that audio is analyzed. Their reference library and comparison software must incredible.
What is most annoying is that YouTube determine that I am guilty until I prove I am innocent.
BIAB & RB2024 Win.(Audiophile), Sonar Platinum, Cakewalk by Bandlab, Izotope Prod.Bundle, Roland RD-1000, Synthogy Ivory, Kontakt, Focusrite 18i20, KetronSD2, NS40M Monitors, Pioneer Active Monitors, AKG K271 Studio H'phones
... determine that I am guilty until I prove I am innocent.
My ex-employer did that first bit, except that they made up the accusations, denied the proof of innocence, threatened me via lawyers and accused me (to the police) of harassment when I tried to protest. Very nasty!
Edit: ... so I'm sorry if I'm sometimes fractious as a consequence.
Last edited by Gordon Scott; 07/16/2204:54 AM.
Jazz relative beginner, starting at a much older age than was helpful. Kawai MP6, Korg M50, Ui24R, Saffire Pro 40. AVL:MXE Linux; Windows 11; Win8.1: Scarletts BIAB2022 UltraPAK, Reaper, a bunch of stuff.
You all have made me wonder what I purchased when I buy something from MusicNotes or some other similar product??
...Deb
Deb, google/bing is musicnotes legit and you will find many responses saying yes it is legit. It is the same for other music printing sites. The sites pay the royalties to the proper organizations. If they didn't the music police would be on their butts ASAP.
Me, it's not about how many times you fail, it's about how many times you get back up. Cop, that's not how field sobriety tests work.
64 bit Win 10 Pro, the latest BiaB/RB, Roland Octa-Capture audio interface, a ton of software/hardware
So, if I chose to I could play the music I purchased wherever?
Cool!
...Deb
Technically no! If you play at a bar, club, or party house they must pay to have music played at their establishment, otherwise the music police can shut them down. However the music police rarely go after the performer(s) in those instances. They will go after you if you record a cover song, with or without the purchase of sheet music, and try to sell it or post it on-line.
The pay the royalties clause is why PGMusic and many other sites do not allow covers to be played on their sites.
Do not let this scare you. If you are playing is small venues, nursing homes, retirement homes, VA places, etc you have nothing to worry about. I have played out in party houses, bars, clubs, basically you name it and I probably have played there for many years with no problems.
Me, it's not about how many times you fail, it's about how many times you get back up. Cop, that's not how field sobriety tests work.
64 bit Win 10 Pro, the latest BiaB/RB, Roland Octa-Capture audio interface, a ton of software/hardware
They are real. I was playing in a house band. Great gig. So one night the club owner came to see us in the dressing room and asked us for copies of set lists. It seems a representative of one of the two big PRO's had showed up, looked at the tunes in the Juke Box, and noticed our gear and wanted to know what songs we were playing on a regular basis. We gave him a whole stack of the set lists that covered several months of 4 sets per night. The PRO wasn't after the band for the money... they were after the venue owner to collect royalty money from him.
In another band.... before I had been hired to play guitar with them, the lead singer/artist had recorded a pop song that was a cover of a hit from several years back. He had it pressed into 45 RPM and was selling them as well as playing the song at his gigs. The music police informed him that he didn't buy the rights to the song and therefore....cease and desist all sales of product immediately. So he had a big box of unsellable vinyl. As it turned out, the copyright owner was refusing all attempts to buy the license needed. Something about the song being tied up in legal limbo and well..... no you can't use it currently. Wasn't any of my business and as long as I was paid for the gigs.... I was good. He gave me a copy of the record....I think I still have it around here somewhere. It's not very good. Maybe that's why they told him to stop selling it.
You can find my music at: www.herbhartley.com Add nothing that adds nothing to the music. You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both.
The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
As of this spring YT reserves the right to monetize your uploads if they so choose and even if you are not a YT partner. And you receive ZERO income. And only as a partner can you receive the income and if you choose turn off the ads. Being a partner requires 5,000 followers and around a zillion plays.
So...they monetized our most popular songs. Great ... now our friends and family can watch a prostate or gut ad before seeing our vid.
I was so POed I opened a subscription account to Vimeo and uploaded all our work there. It's a great site and offers higher quality streaming and after the above I do not mind paying for it.
As of this spring YT reserves the right to monetize your uploads if they so choose and even if you are not a YT partner. And you receive ZERO income. And only as a partner can you receive the income and if you choose turn off the ads. Being a partner requires 5,000 followers and around a zillion plays.
So...they monetized our most popular songs. Great ... now our friends and family can watch a prostate or gut ad before seeing our vid.
I was so POed I opened a subscription account to Vimeo and uploaded all our work there. It's a great site and offers higher quality streaming and after the above I do not mind paying for it.
Bud
YouTube is not a great company to us normal musicians. If you have over a billion views like Taylor Swift, who indeed has several videos in the billion view club, you make a fortune from the ad revenue. Otherwise you just pad the YouTube pocket. Granted it takes a lot, a whole lot, of views to earn ad revenue. The advertisers are paying for eyes and clicks not 1000 views by friends and family.
My wife asked if I had seen the dog bowl. I told her I didn't even know he could.
I'm hardly a YT expert but I am a pretty astute observer. I'm now spending a good 90% of what used to be "TV time" on YT and I have a bunch of favorite creators that I've followed for 3-4 years and watched them grow from literally a part time fun thing in their bedroom to a full time literal network making big money. How do I know they're making big money? They explain it in detail and you can see it in their lifestyle. Just one example LegitStreetCars. I'm a long time car guy and I've been buying 10-12 year old Mercedes with high miles for years. Keep them for 4 or 5 years, sell them, buy another one.
The LegitStreetCars guy was a MB tech for over ten years. Then he went to work for the City of Chicago as a foreman working on all the city heavy equipment. He started posting basic how to vids maybe 4 years ago. Things like how to change the cabin filters, how to buff the fading off the headlights, things like that. He would buy an old Benz for himself, fix it up keep it for whatever time then sell it and he would post vids of all the details. Over the years his channel grew and grew and I noticed his small suburban house garage was getting more sophisticated. He made a big deal of the fact he could afford to buy a lift and some other expensive stuff. He started getting sponsors, mostly car related stuff. He would begin traveling to buy special old Benz's like a 2002 AMG and he would tell us that it's getting harder to do all his car vids with a full time job and he's doing well financially with YT.
Then he made a big announcement last year. He got his 10 years in with the city, his pension vested and he quit and he's now full time on YT. He talked about how he was making about 110K with the city plus bene's. He's making more than that now on YT. How do I know this? He bought, not rented, a building that used to be a detail shop and turned it into his shop with 4 lifts. It all for his channel, he's not working as a repair shop to the public. He's explained all this in detail over the last year. Could this be a slick scam to get viewers? Maybe but I doubt it because he's now doing things like he bought a classic 65 Rolls Royce Silver Cloud for $26,000 and he made a series of vids fixing it all up with zero knowledge about how to work on a Rolls. I find that interesting, YMMV. He says it all due to YT.
I've watched other people doing other subject matter do the same thing. One guy I've watched for years has 2 channels going now. I'm a vet and he's been military commentator for years on YT and the Ukraine War has just exploded his main channel called Speak the Truth. In just the last month he now has a formal studio with a cameraman, he brings in guests like a former Marine who went to Ukraine to fight as a volunteer. He was in combat for 4 months until he caught something and got very sick and had to leave. Very interesting video of him describing his experience over there and he's going back as soon as he recovers. That's not for everyone, he's talking real down and dirty combat. The creator has hired a professional journalist in Ukraine with his own cameraman to create an hour long documentary. He's another one who quit his full time job.
This is just two of about a dozen examples I can cite. In the music and movie field there are tons of "Reaction" vids. They are done by young people reacting to mostly classic music of the 60's and 70's along with movie reactions. The problem is when it comes to music it's all over the place. One guy I really like just quit because he's saying 90% of his vids have been blocked by YT and Rick Beato has talked about that too. Yet there's another guy who's been reacting for several years to the same music and he hasn't said anything about having problems with YT and his vids are all up. By reacting I mean they play the original music either off an album or a live concert then discuss and react to it. Same with movies. One girl reacted to Terminator, played many clips from the movie and commented about it. One guy says he has to quit while the other keeps on chugging along. When it comes to using copyrighted material for anything, it can be a problem but most other subjects are basically good on YT.
I just wish YT has been around 30 years ago. I have many ideas for a channel but it's too late for me now. People can complain about big tech, corporate greed and all that rot but to me YT is one of the greatest opportunities there is for an individual with some personality who likes to talk to really do something they like and make money doing it. Just not using somebody else's copyrighted material.
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Video: Enhanced Melodists in Band-in-a-Box® 2024 for Windows®!
We've enhanced the Melodists feature included in Band-in-a-Box® 2024 for Windows!
Access the Melodist feature by pressing F7 in the program to open the new MultiPicker Library and locate the [Melodist] tab.
You can now generate a melody on any track in the program - very handy! Plus, you select how much of the melody you want generated - specify a range, or apply it to the whole track.
This new panel offers built-in specific support for the Reaper® DAW API allowing direct transfer of Band-in-a-Box® files to/from Reaper® tracks!
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-Send Audio for MIDI Track: Enable this option to send rendered audio for MIDI tracks.
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