TheGreek Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Remember the 70s and the Punk movement??? When bands were adamant that they would never "sell out"?? There are currently adverts on the TV featuring samples by both The Jam and The Sex Pistols - probably the two most vocal against "selling out".... My question: are tracks from 30-40 years ago which don't generate an income "fair game" for adverts and the like??? Integrity -v- income.... Quote
Lozz196 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I can`t remember details but if I recall correctly I think after a specified period (determined at time of registering or something) music can be used irrespective of the artist? I may have this wrong though. Quote
gjones Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 4 minutes ago, Lozz196 said: I can`t remember details but if I recall correctly I think after a specified period (determined at time of registering or something) music can be used irrespective of the artist? I may have this wrong though. I checked with Google AI and it said that copyright generally lasts for the life of the last surviving author plus 70 years. Up until 2013 it was protected for 50 years. Then Paul McCartney said......'Hold on a minute!' and Keith Richards said 'Oi mate!'. 1 Quote
thodrik Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I'm a big fan of The Cult and every time I hear She Sells Sanctuary on a coffee advert, a car advert, holiday advert, adverts for podcasts, adverts for tv shows, adverts about musical streaming sites, adverts about headphones or adverts about the merits of advertising, my first reaction is one of 'good stuff, Billy Duffy and Ian Astbury got paid again'. 1 Quote
ian61 Posted 44 minutes ago Posted 44 minutes ago 1 hour ago, Lozz196 said: music can be used irrespective of the artist? Which is an important point. Tons of old music now being used in TV ads flogging stuff to 'young people'. Cant think of one non Hip Hop style tune from a current artist being used. Quote
fretmeister Posted 39 minutes ago Posted 39 minutes ago I don't think it's an integrity issue at all. The world has changed. Hardly any bands make good money anymore and everyone has to eat. Quote
Wombat Posted 28 minutes ago Posted 28 minutes ago Cliff Richard is a vocal protagonist of the 70 year thing as a fair bit of his catalogue will expire soon so ‘stop’ his income. You can go down all the ‘his music is crap’, ‘he’s rich so what’ etc avenues but imo you should have copyright for your lifetime at least. I guess Jimi H’s family must be bricking it! Quote
chris_b Posted 22 minutes ago Posted 22 minutes ago It's not an integrity issue in 2025. It was a bunch of kids talking bollocks in the 1970's. 1 Quote
Dad3353 Posted 19 minutes ago Posted 19 minutes ago (edited) I've never really understood why anyone should get paid for stuff they did years ago, and has already earned from concerts and disks sold, just because it has become popular or useful for somebody else. Not a popular view amongst musicians, I'll admit, but I can't somehow see its justification. Other people invent or create many things during their lifetime, but don't get a regular income from it. It's an odd system, to me. Edited 18 minutes ago by Dad3353 1 Quote
wateroftyne Posted 13 minutes ago Posted 13 minutes ago 1 minute ago, Dad3353 said: I've never really understood why anyone should get paid for stuff they did years ago, and has already earned from concerts and disks sold, just because it has become popular or useful for somebody else. Not a popular view amongst musicians, I'll admit, but I can't somehow see its justification. Other people invent or create many things during their lifetime, but don't get a regular income from it. It's an odd system, to me. Most musicians don’t get a significant chunk of cash every time they create new music. Quote
Owen Posted 12 minutes ago Posted 12 minutes ago 2 minutes ago, Dad3353 said: Other people invent or create many things during their lifetime, but don't get a regular income from it. If it is copyrighted, they do. You can bet that pharmaceutical companies don't say "no worries everyone, crack on using our stuff, it is a gift because that is who we are" Choose any large industry you want and insert it in to that sentence. Yes, writing a song which is a hit might only take 30 minutes. But the work to get to that point is not trivial. 1 Quote
chris_b Posted 3 minutes ago Posted 3 minutes ago 11 minutes ago, Dad3353 said: I've never really understood why anyone should get paid for stuff they did years ago, and has already earned from concerts and disks sold, just because it has become popular or useful for somebody else. Not a popular view amongst musicians, I'll admit, but I can't somehow see its justification. Other people invent or create many things during their lifetime, but don't get a regular income from it. It's an odd system, to me. I'm surprised and disappointed that a musician should think that way. If people are using your music, even 50 years later, to sell their products then the music should also be earning for the creators. If a scientist discovers something and patents the idea he earns from that. Music is no different. Quote
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