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Home Life & Culture Music

How To Go About Licensing Your Music

by Vincent Elegbeleye
October 25, 2024
in Music
1 0
1
How to Go About Licensing Your Music

The Musician. Photo Credit : Pexels

Knowing how to go about licensing your music is as important as making the music if you seek to derive any meaningful income from your musical efforts. Music is a big part of civilization. Centuries had passed but music survived and even grew to greater heights every single decade. 

As a matter of fact, the demand for music has been rising very steadily in the past ten years, and it will continue that way in the foreseeable future. It comes along with the big amount of revenue the music industry is currently getting year after year.

 It is an unstoppable force as people always look up for the next great artist around the corner, thus continuing the cycle and the relevance of music. The demand for music content is at an all-time high. The global music revenue since the turn of the century has been steady. The currency is measured in billions.

As the technology grew, the music got more technical, complex and in demand. Others take credit for using music they don’t own. Nowadays, independent musicians are well aware of protecting their work for legal purposes. Through music licensing, you can be ensured of your asset/work being protected legally.

How To Go About Licensing Your Music

What is music licensing? Music licensing is the licensed used for copyrighted music. This allows the owner of the music to maintain the copyright of their original work. It also ensures the owner of the musical work to be compensated if their music is being used by others. 

The music licensing companies has limited rights to use the work without separate agreements.

In music licensing, you could get your work licensed in the form of music, composition and songwriting.

During the music licensing process, there are terms that would be discussed by the groups involved. If you are an independent musician, you would be the licensor. You are the one responsible for the music created, thus you are the copyright owner of the licensed work.

How to Go About Licensing Your Music
Music is a Journey Photo Credit : PublicDomainPictures

A licensee would be the music licensing company as they would be the one who will distribute your work to other industries. They will also collect the royalty fees as distribute them back to you if your music is included in live performances, TV shows, ads, campaigns, video games, etc.

There are also two kinds of contracts in music licensing, namely exclusive contract and non-exclusive contract. Exclusive contract means having your work licensed exclusively to a single music licensing company. 

Only a single company has the authority to distribute and market your work. If you signed an exclusive contract to your song or album, you cannot use the same music contents and get it signed by other music licensing companies. The agreement is exclusive and confidential to the licensor and the licensee.

Non-exclusive contract allows a second party to distribute your work and it doesn’t prohibit the licensor to sell their music to other music licensing companies or licensees. An independent musician can sign a non-exclusive contract to multiple companies using the same music content. 

How To Go About Licensing Your Music

Non-exclusive contracts are generally used to prevent an individual from being locked into a restrictive contract before their work gains popularity. This type of contract is designed to protect music artists from being taken advantage of in the early stages of their respective careers while on the process of getting their music out to larger audiences.

There are also cases which involve direct payment for used music content. This is called Sync Fees. Sync fee is a license granted by a holder of copyrighted music to allow a licensee to synchronize music with visual media such as ads, films, TV shows, movie trailers, video games, etc. 

For example, a video producer is in dire need of music content for a certain project and is in a limited time of finding one.

In these cases, the artist and the music licensing company will be contacted directly for the possible use of the original work and negotiate the upfront payment involved. Sync fees can range from a few dollars to a couple of hundred dollars or up to thousands. 

The payment usually depends on how big and established a company is.

If it is a well-known company, there is a probability that the sync fee will spike up in value.

We need to understand that businesses nowadays are paying a premium for music at an all-time high. The influx and revenue generated on different industries are worth billions of dollars and the music artists who got their music licensed will get a big share of that money.

 The content of music is very important. Every single company need visual and audio content. You can’t do ads, shows and movies without having any music content.

Music licensing brings compensation for assets used.

This is called royalty fees. A royalty fee is a payment collected by one party from another for the ongoing use of a copyrighted asset. You can get compensated if your work is featured on live public performances. For every live use of your music, you get compensated as you own the copyright of your work.

How To Go About Licensing Your Music

The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) has collected over $941 million dollars in licensing fees and distributed $827.7 million dollars in royalties to its members back in 2014. BMI on the other hand collected more than $1.013 billion dollars in license fees and distributed over $877 million dollars in royalties to its members during the year 2015.

Music licensing is the modern way of earning through music. In the past few years, physical sales had gone down. Streaming music has taken over because it’s more convenient and practical with the help of the World Wide Web. With the rise of streaming sales, the figures that could be collected as royalty fees could spike up in the years coming.

 In fact, as stated in an Australian financial review website, streaming generated $2.5 billion dollars in US music sales last year, overtaking digital downloads as the industry’s biggest source of music revenue.

As stated in the picture below, the global streaming of music is projected to reach greater heights in terms of revenue in the upcoming years.

The internet contributed greatly to the rise of music licensing and streaming. 20 years ago, the distribution of music hasn’t been exactly this big. Television shows and filmmakers are the top two industries that need music content. 

Today, there are more and more TV shows, films, commercials, movies, ads and tons of video games that need music content. It is safe to say that the internet opened the public eye about the opportunities involved behind it.

One of the most visited sites on earth is YouTube.

People use, duplicate, rework, copy, revise and perform music from different artists around the world. It also has an influx of ads which contains music content. 

To track all these data, YouTube has a Content ID System. If your music is licensed, you can contact this site and they will take a look at their data and see if your work is being used by other parties. 

As the licensor, you have the authority to take actions such as mute the audio which matches your music, block a whole video from being viewed, track the video’s viewership statistics or monetize the video by running ads against it. 

Every country has different rules about it. But YouTube runs a lot of ads and monetizing work from this site is very probable.

If you are an independent musician, you must improve and instil professionalism in your craft to get your chances up of being signed by a music licensing company. 

With billions of dollars of revenue involved today, you want at least a slice of the pie. Monetizing your passion is never easy but taking the necessary steps to make it work is a must to reach success.

How To Go About Licensing Your Music.

 

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Vincent Elegbeleye

Vincent Elegbeleye

Vincent Elegbeleye is a believer in the power of storytelling and journalism. A facilitator of global enlightenment and knowledge. An entrepreneur at heart and a global citizen. He is the Executive Editor and Publisher at Morganable, where he provides editorial leadership, strategic direction and publishing insight on journalism, public affairs and digital media.

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