- Explore how music publishing relates to how artists make money.
- Find out about rights, royalties and splits and how to get your music out there.
- Learn how Stormzy, Amy Winehouse and Mac DeMarco have dealt with music rights.
What is music publishing?
Once you have created a piece of music, you can make money from it in various ways, including when it is:
- performed live
- played on the radio
- streamed
- downloaded
- sold as a CD or vinyl
- used in a game, film or commercial
A publishing deal is when you sell the rights to your music to a company, who then work to get that music out to a bigger audience.
If you haven鈥檛 signed a publishing deal, then you are the publisher and all the money should come to you.
Organising the money due
Publishing helps organise the money due to you when your music is used for something.
You can receive some money for being the writer of the music and some for being the performer of it.
An example:
You perform a cover version of a famous song at a music festival. This is then shown on TV.Who is due money from this?
There would be earnings from the performance and the broadcast.You and the original artist would be due money. You get money as the performer.
Sheet music
Sheet music is music that has been written down and could be printed on paper. It usually includes musical notes and bars. It can be written by hand or using a computer.
The owner of music has rights to that music printed and sold as sheet music. For example, if a singer performed a song in a theatre using sheet music, the writer of the music would get paid and so would the singer of the song.
The sheet music for The Sound Of Us is owned by the 成人快手 but it is free for you to download, print and play.
Download the sheet music of the band's song The Sound Of Us.
Royalties
If your music is played there are a few ways you could earn from it:
- Performance royalties - when your music is played on the radio, at a music festival, in a shopping centre, cafe or public place.
- Mechanical royalties - when your recorded music is streamed, downloaded or sold as a physical product like vinyl or CDs.
- Licensing & sync royalties - when your music is used on a TV program, computer game, film or advert.
In the UK, PPL and PRS organise the collection of royalties:
PPL (Phonographic Performance Limited) - collect money from businesses that play your recorded music and pay it to you.
PRS (Performing Rights Society) - collect money when someone uses the music composition or lyrics that you have created and pay it to you.
When you register your songs with PPL or PRS, they will then send you statements (like a bank account) and pay you money when it is due.
Listen to these tracks and find out more about how they were published
What to do with your music
Make a piece of music and then consider what you will do with it. How would it be published?
Splits
Sometimes music is made in collaboration, by a band or group. The band must decide how their share will be split and this gets complicated when different amounts of writing are done by different members. It鈥檚 best to agree how to split up publishing when you write a song, to avoid these problems later.
Record and publishing deals
These occur when you agree to sell some of the rights to your music to a record label, in exchange for them helping to release and promote it. Often this takes the form of you giving them a percentage of your recording/publishing, and they manufacture and distribute the music to a wider audience.
You should carefully consider any deals offered by a record label - often the record label may end up making more money from the music than the artist! At the same time, record labels and publishing companies can be the best way to take your music to a wider audience.
Keywords
Keyword | Definitions |
---|---|
sheet music | A piece of music written out using notation so it can be read on paper. |
performance royalties | What you receive when your music is played on the radio, at a music festival, in a shopping centre, cafe or public place. |
mechanical royalties | What you receive when your recorded music is streamed, downloaded or sold as a physical product like vinyl or CDs. |
licensing & sync royalties | What you receive if your music is used on a TV program, computer game, film or advert. |
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