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Royalty-free music

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Norwegianbea | 11:05 Sat 27th Jun 2009 | Music
5 Answers
Hello,

Please can someone explain why some classical music is deemed royalty-free? What is the criteria? I understand it may have something to do with the age of the music or the death of the composer but, other than that, I'm a bit lost.

Any help would be much appreciated.

Thanks,

NB

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I have had a search round the internet and it is a complex subject.

There is the copywright on the actual MUSIC (score) and their is the copywright on the RECORDING.

Seems once the composer has been dead for 70 years the music (score) goes out of copyright.

The recording goes out of copyright 50 years after the music was recorded.

However not sure how this fits in with "royalty free".

For example, if a piece of music that was recorded over 50 years ago is played on the radio are royalties still paid.

As I said, it seems a complex subject and I would not preted to understand it all.

Little bit here

http://www.callcentrehelper.com/classical_musi c_on_hold_copyright.htm
This site may help, there are some info pages if you hunt around

http://www.bmi.com/
Question Author
Thanks for these links - I'll look into this more, thanks again! NB
Hi,
Maybe you are talking about Public domain. A lot of classical music compositions are in the public domain, I am talking about the composition not about the recording. Depending on the country where the composer is from, his music compositions will be in the public domain 70 years after his death (in some countries it's 50 years, in others more..), but this doesn't mean that you can use a Chopin piano recording and use it for free in your production.
The composition is in the public domain, so you can make your own version and own recording and use it wherever you want.
In the recording there is other rights: producer rights, musicians rights, publisher rights..so the composition can be in the public domain and the recording not.

Royalty free music is another subject, this term is related to music tracks that are nor managed by Performance rights organizations such BMI, SACEM..

When a filmmaker want to use a music track in his film (for example) he will pay a series of fees for the use of the music, (to the composer, the publisher, the producer...etc) and additional fees for each public performance.
If a royalty free music is used, the filmmaker (or any user) pay once for all the necessary rights (including all performances). There is many royalty free music providers:
http://freemusicarchive.org/
https://www.musicscreen.org/
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