| Author | Message |
LISCENCING HELP PLEASE hi guys,
would u rather have a novice at matters of the heart....or an expert lover?....then don't complain and appreciate this.....
"today, your love. tomorrow. the world...wish could stay, but i'm looking 4 more" | |
Reply w/quote - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
nobody knows what im reffering to huh? would u rather have a novice at matters of the heart....or an expert lover?....then don't complain and appreciate this.....
"today, your love. tomorrow. the world...wish could stay, but i'm looking 4 more" | |
Reply w/quote - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
1) As soon as you have "fixed" your work into a copy, e.g. recorded your song on tape or wrote the notes and lyrics down on paper, it is already copyright protected.
http://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-register.html#multiple
May I register more than one work on the same application? Where do I list the titles? You may register unpublished works as a collection on one application with one title for the entire collection if certain conditions are met. It is not necessary to list the individual titles in your collection. Published works may only be registered as a collection if they were actually first published as a collection and if other requirements have been met. See Circular 1, Copyright Basics, section “Registration Procedures.” BTW. names generally can not be copyrighted, but trademarked only. 2) ASCAP needs to know what songs you are the author of, or they can't collect and pay you the royalties. Joining ASCAP however only becomes really interesting when your work is played on the airwaves a lot. They use playlists of radio stations for example to assess how much your song has been publicly performed. They do NOT however have a transparant method to determine how much royalties you should get. It's basically a pretty "shadowy" organisation. Go to www.ascap.com for more info, if the site works that is... BTW you could also join BMI. 3) One word of advice: don't just sign anything they offer you, thinking you will lose that one big chance if you don't sign it. Study a contract carefully, get proper legal advice and don't sign when you know it's not what you want. - [Edited 11/17/08 9:51am] | |
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