Stupidity Of Licensing Demands Means The Wrecking Crew Can't Help Sell More Music With Documentary

from the this-makes-no-sense dept

A couple years ago, we wrote about a panel discussion with a couple of music documentary filmmakers, who discussed the ridiculousness of trying to clear the samples used in their films, even though the works almost certainly could only lead to increased music sales. The NY Times recently had a similar story, as a documentary movie about the group of studio musicians known as “The Wrecking Crew,” who performed on a ton of the biggest musical hits ever, has been sitting around, finished but unreleased for over four years because of the impossibility of clearing the music in the film. Even though the music was all performed by The Wrecking Crew, whose members would love to see the film out there, the copyrights are held by a variety of entities, including the various major labels.

The article notes that the labels are so desperate for extra cash, that they’re asking much more than they have in the past for licensing fees. But that’s incredibly, stupidly, short-sighted. Getting a documentary like this out in the world could only serve to increase demand for a bunch of those songs, which would open up all sorts of opportunities to make some more money. But the labels can’t seem to see past today in any of their activities.

Separately, as the article notes, the filmmaker could try to rely on fair use… except that the cost of actually defending a lawsuit (even if the lawsuit is bogus) could be quite prohibitive, especially since he’s already spent a ton of his life’s savings on the movie itself. And I thought copyright was supposed to encourage ways to get the music out there…

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Comments on “Stupidity Of Licensing Demands Means The Wrecking Crew Can't Help Sell More Music With Documentary”

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56 Comments
RD says:

You thought so

“And I thought copyright was supposed to encourage ways to get the music out there…”

Its SUPPOSED to, the constitution says its supposed to, congress is tasked with making it so.

But in reality, it now only serves to permanently lock up culture for the benefit of a very few at the expense of the entire public. Fair use has been relegated to a “defense after lawsuit filed” instead of what it was intended to be: an EXCEPTION.

:Lobo Santo (profile) says:

Well...

*Ahem*

It takes very creative interpretation of the laws in order to be such an incredibly dickish, short-sighted, extortionist bastard without having done anything illegal.

As we all know, creative people are know as “artists”

Therefore, these “Artistic Lawyers” are blocking the “hippy artists” from getting anything with their penniless problems–no pay, no play!

/expert-troll

Anonymous Coward says:

the main reason the labels get away with this type of thing is the fact that they have a bottomless money pit, whereas individuals or a group of people involved in the making of something have extremely limited resources. therefore the labels are in a ‘win-win’ situation, even if it takes a lifetime to achieve the desired result.

Anonymous Coward says:

I think that part of their problem is that they (like someone else we all know) started by making a finished product, and then tried to get permission and rights organized. In essence, that means the rights holders have you sort of dead – you can’t move forward without them.

“Getting a documentary like this out in the world could only serve to increase demand for a bunch of those songs”

No clear – would the documentary actually get a wide enough viewership to really mean anything?

Jake (profile) says:

Re:

“No clear – would the documentary actually get a wide enough viewership to really mean anything?”

This point should be moot. If it does get the viewership it is bound to help, and if it doesn’t it will not cause any damage to the original work so there would be no harm the the copyright holder. The labels should look at it as a no-lose situation, instead they look at it as a money grab, their problem is that in this case there appears to be no money to grab, so instead of a no-lose situation it becomes a lose/lose situation.

RD says:

You thought so

“RD, can you show us where the constitution or copyright law for that matter says something about making it cheap and easy to re-use other people’s works?”

Wow you actually said that. Ok.

http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html

I assume an actual government website should be sufficient even for you.

“Promoting progress doesn’t mean a free license to re-do other people’s music. Is that really progress, or just more standing still?”

Except they didnt “re-do other peoples music.” If they had, had they done an actual REMAKE of each song, there is already statutory fixed costs for that that would have been FAR cheaper.

They only used PARTS of the song to illustrate the history of the actual musicians who made those songs. Thats defacto fair use right there.

But they want significantly more money for using these snippets than would cost if they redid the ENTIRE song as a cover song. Its absurd. And so are you for asserting the garbage you did in this post.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

You’re saying this film wouldn’t generate many sales because it would not be seen by many people, but it should cost millions for licensing the music?

Well obviously!

We all know that when someone copies something, the person who owns the thing that was copied loses money – it comes right out of their bank account! This is why it’s considered stealing.

Now, these dirty, dirty, pirates – umm, I mean filmmakers – will be making money on these copies, all while the legitimate lawyers and corporations are actively losing money – so they need to charge double the amount they’re losing just to break even!

Plus, as only a dirty un-american communist hippy type would do this for free, they have to make a profit – and as Congress had decreed that each copy is worth $150,000 each, even 10 million dollars is a bargain!

Silence8 says:

Oh wow, got invited to a screening of this from Damon Tedesco (Tommy’s other Son)a long while back, didn’t get to go, but figured I’d get another e-mail letting me know it was on DVD or something. Didn’t know they were going through all these issues.

Sucks when you can’t even document your own Father’s history as a musician and share it with people.

Anonymous Coward says:

Other similar films have been released on DVD.
“Standing In The Shadows of Motown’ for one.
I guess
1) You need to get the label or labels onside from the beginning.
2) You can bypass recording copyright by re-performing the classic songs, EXACTLY as they did in the Motown film.

Finally, yes THe Wrecking Crew were session musicians who were paid a straight fee and never held any rights (performance or otherwise) for the recordings they played on.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

I find it funny that people think your comment is “insightful”, because it actually seems to be pretty closed minded.

Actual sales generated is not a measurement that decides what the rights to something costs. Many uses of a musical piece might not lead to huge amounts of sales for the original artist.

There is no relationship. Anyone thinking your comment is insightful really isn’t thinking too hard, are they?

Ed C. says:

Re:

Nice dodge, but try answering the question, why does the licensing cost so much?

Many uses of a musical piece might not lead to huge amounts of sales for the original artist.

Of course the original artist don’t get huge sales for many uses of their works, it goes to the labels. Even when the artist isn’t under contract.

Anonymous Coward says:

You thought so

“They only used PARTS of the song to illustrate the history of the actual musicians who made those songs. Thats defacto fair use right there. “

Oh god, it’s defacto nothing you pill head. You are worse than Mike is calling fair use on everything.

Look, let’s try to make it simple. Your argument is that copyright law is suppose to do something – so when I ask you to point out EXACTLY where this means that you should be able to license others people’s music at a low rate and use it without concern, and you point generally to copyright law.

WTF? I can find a copy of the law by myself. I am asking you to explain your deluded notions, point to where the law specifically says “you must license your work cheaply”, and I will even go further to say where in copyright law it says “you must license to others” at all. It doesn’t.

Between that and fair use, I would say you have some CAPITAL issues to address.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

“Of course the original artist don’t get huge sales for many uses of their works, it goes to the labels. Even when the artist isn’t under contract.”

Nice dodge. Try “original artists or those they have sold the rights to”.

Now, address the issue – why allow free use of material that MIGHT drive a few sales, when you can charge a reasonable license fee and allow the documentary creators to take the risk instead?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

No, they are trading one of three things:

1 – a few sales
2 – $ licensing deal
3 – non-release, non-issue.

Remember, it’s the film makers that WANT to use the music, not the rights holder seeking to get it exposed. Giving the rights to the music for free to anyone walking in the door hoping that they generate you some sales seems pretty silly.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

When you give something for free with the hope of selling something else later, it’s called taking a risk. Basically, you risk the loss of licensing income now, in order to hopefully make money later. Risk.

Some might call it “give it away and pray”.

Even if the license was $100 a song, giving it away for free would be a risk. Would the license at $100 make more than the sales driven by this work?

Further, you have to remember that the documentary makers are not working to sell music – they are working to monetize their documentary and make money from it. They aren’t working to sell music, it MIGHT be a side effect, but there is absolutely no guarantee.

Those who hold the rights have no reason to take the risk. They have a product that is in demand, and they can license it for what the market will bear. Basic free enterprise. If the film makers feel they are going to make a lot of money with their movie, they can afford to license it – at their risk. They can pay the money and hope they make it back.

if they don’t think it is worth it, then they can just say “nevermind” and not finish the project.

There is little loss for the rights holders – they still hold the rights, they can still sell them on to others, and they are likely still selling recorded copies of their music regardless. The loss of the potential incremental sales from this documentary is not a big deal, and certainly at least as mythical and unproven as losses from piracy. How many sales did they lose by not licensing? Show me how you figure that one out!

Anonymous Coward says:

Director

I’ve heard the director on various talk shows. There are more than 100 songs that are featuring in the film either in clips or in performance. Getting the rights from the record companies as well as from the song’s copyright holders is a nightmare. The rates are structured for big feature films that may have a million dollar or more music budget and no one will budge on the fees for fear that the filmmaker might actually make a profit and they won’t get any of it!

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