

The Flame to Fame
Scooter Johnson
Your band, the internet, and licensing your music.
So you have
a CD, a practice space, a so-so van, a couple of gigs coming up and an internet connection what next? Convergence. A dirty word for corporations but a promising term for bands striving to go that
extra mile for exposure and financial independence. The internet is proving itself to be beneficial to the newest bands and others who recognize that they have to reach far beyond the city limits to make a go
of music as a career.
Your two immediate online needs are a URL or domain name that is
representative of band, preferably www.yourbandname.com with a main email
address of info@yourbandname.com that is checked regularly. You can register via www.internic.net worldwide or www.cira.ca in Canada. With thousands upon thousands of bands online, doing searches for indie bands who have lost themselves at the end of a very long URL can consider themselves truly lost. Dont make people fight to find you! There are many sites that allow you set-up your presence for free or for a monthly fee that includes your own domain name, an email service that allows group emails (ie. regular newsletter or gig/touring announcements), merchandise sales with e-commerce capabilities (credit card processing and shipping) and a walk through of all the steps involved in building your pages. I suggest trying Freedom to Groove.
After the creation of our website, our first foray into online money-making was joining mp3.com. It was relatively easy to upload our music but were not making any money off it and havent for over a year as the cost to be a Premium member per month exceeded what we were making off plays. It was enough to put back into the band for expenses, posters, photocopying press kits, printer cartridges, postage, recording, gas money, CD dubbing costs etc.
Curious on how to market your site, join mailing lists, book a tour,
contact an A&R rep and get the best deal on pressing CD? Check out many of
the dozens of websites put together by your peers that contain many articles, links, resources and directory listings. One excellent source is www.indie-music.com. What you probably will not find is information on music licensing. Licensing? This is the term applied to the process of placing music on visual creative projects, such as film soundtracks, television programs and advertising campaigns.
As more and more music is being made available online for different uses it is natural for production people to turn to the internet to find music. Why? Because you can buy anything on the internet! Savvy bands are spending time on film bulletin boards offering up their music for soundtrack use, indie labels are offering licensing options on their websites and composers are banding together and starting their own online write-for-hire agencies. If you or your bandmates dont have the time, effort or expertise to find soundtrack opportunities and successfully pitch your music there are avenues for you.
Who to trust?
Im on movie sets a lot and I can tell you how hard it is to approach the
music supervisor or the producer with a CD. They may love it or I might lose
my job. Not wanting to jeopardize my finances Ive found a few online
companies that specialize in indie music licensing and are non-exclusive
(which means you can join as many as you want no exclusive memberships).
Before signing with any company remember you are entering into a business
relationship that involves your work and payment for use of that work.
Contracts?
The licensing company should have a legal contract that requires the signatures of the owners or the authors/composers of the music sent in. If the company is legit they will want to protect themselves from fraud artists that will send in other peoples music and profit from it. Also there is the final license contract with the filmmakers or whomever to peruse is it for a Master/Sync license or just a Sync license? Sites such as The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, BMI.com, or The Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada can define these terms if you are not familiar with the industry jargon.
Fees?
The contract should also state very clearly the fees (monthly? yearly? by the byte?) involved and how future licensing income will be split between you and them and how often you will be paid.
Pre-Cleared or Restricted?
Also, ask about whether the tracks are required to be pre-cleared or if you can request restrictions. Some companies have a standard restriction that reads something like this track cannot be used on scenes depicting racism, pornography, use of tobacco, alcohol or drugs. Requesting a restriction will obviously limit the amount of interest your music garners and ultimately the pay-out. Personally I dont care if a European sausage company wants to use my music on a television commercial Im an indie musician who can barely pay the rent, who is going to blame me for taking the money? Ill take that money and invest it in my bands future.
Where to start?
Start where you begin all your other research on your favourite search
engine. If you want to go the total DIY personal route based on your location, use your city name and keywords like film production, indie movies, production companies, music wanted, etc.
Most cities and provinces have film associations and unions that keep track
of local shoots and list them on their websites with contact information.
Be prepared to be your own sales agent; you will have to send each of the
interested parties a pitch package (some require two one for the director
and one for the music supervisor), diligently follow-up, negotiate your
terms and if needed, hire a lawyer to proof your contract.
If you are willing to let go of a lot of control, a full-service online
licensing agency like Realia Music Inc. may be worth looking into. One of the larger agencies online, their online catalogue consists of indie music from around the world and its pre-cleared and priced by a sliding scale that caps at $5,000/world-wide usage. They have restrictions available but only a special case basis (pre-existing contracts between musicians and other parties - I asked) and provide a one-stop service for people who have limited budgets, tight schedules and credit cards. They have a one-time $5 membership fee and a $1/song submission fee, 50/50 license split and a $2/song shipping fee for songs
licensed. Your songs are represented for as long as you wish and if you get
an exclusive deal with a publishing company or label, they promise they
will remove your songs within 24 hours.
If you have a good idea of what your music is worth and prefer to wrangle your deals yourself try SongCatalog Inc.. Their system provides a virtual middleman for your negotiations. You submit as many tracks as you wish for placement in their online Active List or in the Vault and pay per track. Fees are billed monthly and start at $4.95 for up to 25 audio files stored in the Vault and $9.95 for up to 25 songs featured on the Exchange (site search engine) and increase by smaller increments every 50/100/200 songs registered. There are different levels of search capabilities that have a separate fee rate but you can check out there website for more details. People who wish to license music register at no cost, browse the catalogue and when a suitable track is located, they send an email through the website to the owner who then responds. Dialogue and negotiations ensue and you are ultimately responsible for finalizing your deal.
I would advise to check out the smaller companies, they appear to have more staying power than the large online music companies. LicenseMusic.com, one
of the first and definitely the largest, shut down business abruptly months ago and is currently being auctioned off on the internet through a bankruptcy trustee. Many have forayed into licensing but the complicated traditional licensing system (long protracted negotiations, complicated territorial and usage structures, clearances, exorbitant fees, favoured nations, and script/scene approval) has not translated well online. There was no immediacy, no click through satisfaction that everyone has come to expect from the web. Once the costs of software development, technical support, hosting fees and high-priced management were factored in the license fees were unaffordable and potential buyers were back in the nightclubs chatting up bands after their sets.
Online there is a market for indie music even if the band has broken up,
doesnt tour, is brand new or not commercially friendly, and it requires
hardly any work on behalf of the band. You fill in an application, get the
appropriate signatures, mail it in and wait for the money to arrive. It is
the agencys business to market their catalogue, customer services and
bring the buyers in.
With record labels setting their standards higher and higher for new
signings, showing up with a portfolio of licensed tracks in your package
just might be the wedge you need to get in the door. It really doesnt
matter where the track was used or for what product, the fact that your
music can be sold for hard cash is the attractive quality they are looking
for.
Always remember to be realistic with your expectations and tell everybody that you have a licensing agency. It does sound impressive and looks even better on your bio. There are hundreds of thousands of bands in the world with at least one album under their belts. Thats a lot of competition for the same dollar. Its also unlikely that directors Steven Spielberg or Kevin Smith are cruising these sites for music for their next big project; they have budgets that afford them just about any song they want. As an indie musician with an indie agency, your music will be marketed to
projects without a great deal of exposure attached to them. Focus will
usually be on the catalogue not the individual bands, there are fees and it
is a relatively new industry. It may take years for it to take off and
compete with traditional process.
But dont despair, it only takes one new digital filmmaker with a vision and a few thousand dollars to help pay off the band van or press those
extra 500 cds. Its a cheap and viable new way to get your music heard by a larger and potentially lucrative audience and thats what you want. Isnt it?
(all fees referenced are in Canadian dollars)
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