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Mar
2013

musicFIRST campaign for an AM/FM Performance Royalty


Posted in News by A2IM

Last week we shared a guest post from David Macias of Thirty Tigers on the need for AM/FM radio to pay sound recording creators and those that invest in that creation, us!  Roll Call, the on-line publication that everyone in Congress reads, ran an excerpt of David’s item. (also printed below).

RollCall

Macias: Ending Radio’s Free Ride

David Macias

March 15, 2013

Music is a labor of love, but it’s also a business that works under the same market principles as any other part of our economy.

One of these is that markets only work if everyone plays by the same rules. Secret deals or collusion to fix prices are illegal. Another is the idea (under a federal law called the Robinson-Patman Act) that a business must sell to everyone at the same price. There are lots of exceptions to this “no discrimination” rule (volume discounts, happy hours, qualitative differences), but the basic idea is simple and important. Markets don’t work if competitors don’t have the same access to raw materials or products that they re-sell. A paper mill can’t try and suck up to Staples by charging it a lower price than OfficeMax. If that were allowed, OfficeMax could never compete.

But amazingly, in the music business, that’s what happens every day. When digital broadcasters like Pandora or SiriusXM play a song, they must pay a royalty to the musicians and labels that performed and recorded it. It’s only fair; radio makes money selling ads or subscriptions around that music, the folks who created it deserve just compensation. But when AM/FM broadcasts the exact same song, it pays the musicians and labels nothing. That is the definition of a broken market — one that is failing musicians and their labels while handicapping digital radio. It’s the kind of distortion that would violate the Robinson-Patman Act, except that Congress itself created this loophole in the first place!

Fighting to defend its special deal, broadcasters say that musicians should be thanking them for the airplay, since radio spins create new stars. Things have changed in a digital, social world, including how we find and share new music. Congressional auditors looked at this in 2010 and found the connection between radio play and album sales to be “unclear” at best.

AM/FM has submitted a resolution to Congress claiming that “performers benefit considerably from airplay and other over-the-air broadcasting” — but I can find many performers whose music is used to keep listeners engaged until the next commercial, while they themselves are destitute. It’s a pretty simple issue — if you are going to make money off someone else’s work, you should have the decency to pay them for it.

It’s not that AM/FM airplay has zero promotional value — it still reaches the biggest audiences, and any musician or label that claims not to care about cracking the Top 40 isn’t being straight. But this kind of promotion is just much less valuable today than it once was. That’s not just my opinion. Clear Channel CEO Bob Pittman agrees that “clearly [promotion] is not enough.” Other radio products like sports and talk also benefit from on-air promotion, but they still receive enormous licensing fees on top of that. A few years ago, Clear Channel gave Rush Limbaugh a $400 million contract. Meanwhile, it pays nothing for the vocal work of Beyoncé, Katy Perry and Kelly Clarkson combined.

It’s no surprise that digital broadcasters like Pandora have gotten frustrated by the discriminatory system in which they have to pay while broadcast gets a pass. But it’s disappointing that digital’s response has been to hire its own lobbyist army to try and win loophole protection of its own. The solution here isn’t an ugly race to the bottom that would level the playing field by slashing digital royalties (apparently Pandora’s Internet Radio bill would cut rates a whopping 85 percent). It’s to modernize the entire licensing system and create a fair, transparent market where everyone is paid for their work and the playing field is truly, finally level.

If the label and artist communities continue to have our rights ignored, and we can neither work out a comprehensive solution with our fellow stakeholders nor get relief from the Congress that is supposed to keep the playing field level for competitors in a free market, then I fear that our only recourse is to take our case to the courts and remind them of the tenets of the Robinson-Patman Act.

Musicians, labels, songwriters and broadcasters all have important interests at stake, and we know the health of each of these stakeholders are linked. We all love music and want the system to work and thrive. I’m optimistic (foolish?) enough to believe that, if we can just sit down and talk, a framework that is mutually beneficial to all can be crafted. It’s high time that we try.

David Macias is co-founder of Thirty Tigers, a Nashville record label and artist management company.

Mar
2013

musicFIRST’s fight for terrestrial radio (AM/FM) royalties for sound recordings continues!


Posted in News by A2IM

As you know A2IM is a member of the musicFIRST executive steering committee which is advocating for Congress to pass a Performance Right act (PRA) so that artists  and music labels are paid when their sound recordings are played on AM/FM radio, as is the law in almost all countries in the rest of the world. The broadcasters have reintroduced their bill to thwart our initiative, the so called “Local Radio Freedom Act”, again referring to compensation of artists and labels for the music they create and invest in as a tax while all other mediums webcasters, satellite, cable, etc. do compensate our community. Fortunately the number of Congressional legislators signing on to this resolution is declining year-over-year, from 262 sponsors in 2009 to 179 in 2011 to 90 this year. The musicFIRST coalition and its constituents groups fired back this week with the musicFIRST press release and the A2IM letter hand delivered to every Congressman and Senator. Here’s a great Hypebot item on the PRA issue by A2IM member David Macias of Thirty Tigers.

Aug
2012

A2IM’s White House Anti-Piracy Filing Gets Press


Posted in News by A2IM

As A2IM previously reported, The Obama Administration’s Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (“IPEC”), Victoria Espinel is starting the process of developing a new Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement and on behalf of independent music labels and our membership. A2IM has filed comments outlining our community’s specific needs.

All Music Matters (AMM) has taken a special interest in A2IM’s filing stating, “Their letter to Ms. Espinel does a wonderful job detailing many of the issues that affect independent content owners and creators as it relates to weak copyright protection. Informative and inspirational, it will surely speak to and benefit any independent artist, label and publisher who reads it.” Read the full AMM text HERE.

A2IM’s Letter to Victoria Espinel, The Obama Administration’s Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (“IPEC”), can be read HERE.

Victoria Espinel’s speech at A2IM’s Indie Week 2012 can be seen HERE.

About AMM

AMM is a resource for all those whose livelihood depends on music. It is a place for learning, discussion and the sharing of ideas. Most importantly, it is a forum to promote the value of our contributions to society. The goal is to address all members of the music creators’ community, including songwriters, lyricists, composers, artists, performers and publishers both big and small, because all music matters.
Aug
2012

A2IM Files Comments With The Obama Administration Regarding New Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement


Posted in News by A2IM

The Obama Administration’s Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (“IPEC”), Victoria Espinel is starting the process of developing a new Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement and on behalf of independent music labels and our membership, A2IM has filed comments outlining our community’s specific needs.  A2IM’s full comments to IPEC can be read HERE.

IPEC’s agenda states that “by committing to common goals, the U.S. Government will more effectively and efficiently combat intellectual property infringement.” In their agenda they’ve requested comments from the public and interested parties to better shape the Federal Government’s intellectual property enforcement strategy.  IPEC is charged with developing the Administration’s Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement for submission to Congress every three years.

Please don’t hesitate to contact A2IM if you have any comments or questions.  We’ll surely keep you updated on any developments.

Feb
2012

musicFIRST Coalition-Proposed Performance Right Act ( “PRA”) Update


Posted in News by A2IM

We want to update you on the efforts by the musicFIRST coalition, of which A2IM is a member, to get Congress to pass a Performance Right Act (“PRA”) to enact a sound recording royalty to fairly compensate artists and music labels when their sound recordings are played over the air AM/FM radio stations. The absence of having to pay sound recording royalties for the music they play results in a windfall for these stations, as we have reported previously , and these radio stations are the only major medium that does not compensate artists and labels for their sound recordings. In addition to being unfair to music creators, the rest of world’s radio stations do pay sound recording owners; this also creates an unfair unlevel playing field for AM/FM radio versus those consumer oriented service platforms that do compensate artists and labels.

The musicFIRST coalition is continuing its advocacy efforts and last week issued this joint letter against legislation that would mandate the inclusion of an analog FM Chip in cellular phones. This FM chip would allow mobile devices to receive FM broadcast radio signals without paying a cent to recording artists or labels, unfairly putting at a disadvantage existing smart phone music services, like online music streaming services such as Pandora, Slacker, Spotify, etc. that do pay creators. This is just a recent example of the advocacy effort that continues and be assured that the musicFIRST coalition will continue its efforts until a fair PRA is passed.

Dec
2011

The Obama Administration Announces New Intellectual Property Theft Public Awareness Campaign


Posted in News by A2IM

Yesterday the U.S. Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator Victoria Espinel, Attorney General Holder, Acting Deputy Secretary of Commerce Blank and Director of ICE John Morton, and Ann Harkins, the CEO of National Crime Prevention Counsel introduced a new public education campaign to combat intellectual property theft.

Surveys show that a key to stopping piracy is education. This campaign will educate the public on various aspects of intellectual property theft, from health and safety, to counterfeit consumer goods and pharmaceuticals, to illegal downloads and other pirated materials.  Included in this new campaign is a specific PSA video message which features independent artist Addie Brownlee.

A2IM’s anti-piracy campaign, including video PSA’s, which was started in 2009 can be seen here: “Stealing Music Sucks”

A2IM thanks the Obama Administration and all involved for their support.