FAC statement on EU Copyright Extension

The FAC welcomes the news that on the 12th of September 2011, the Council of the EU agreed to extend the copyright term for recordings from 50 to 70 years from release. It has taken nearly 10 years of hard campaigning by PPL, The Musicians Union and others to get to this point. This will go some way to bringing performers rights in line with author’s rights who enjoy protection of their works until 70 years after their death.

There are a number of accompanying measures which could make this very good news for featured and non-featured artists and not just the record companies but as always the devil is in the detail.
At present, we do not know if each member state has to implement these measures or if they can decide for themselves whether to or not. If the latter is the case we will be applying pressure to make sure the UK does so or this term extension will be nothing but bad news for all but the record companies and the most successful artists.

The accompanying measures are as follows:

• A ‘use it or lose it’ clause, which means the record company will have to hand over the recordings to performers it does not make available for sale. Unfortunately, there is no definition of how and where the recording should be made available so we shall have to see what happens here. Generally this should be good news not just for performers but the music buying public too as there are a large number of recordings held by record companies not currently available anywhere.

• A  ’clean slate’ provision, which means that labels are not entitled to make any deductions from the contractual royalties due featured artists during the extended term.  Good news again as long as the labels don’t find a way to reduce the artists share by other means.

• A 20% fund for session musicians. While we think it is a good idea in principal that session musicians should get paid something in their old age we would have like to have seen this taken from the record companies share alone and not off the gross as many recording contracts signed in the 50s, 60s and 70s entitle artists to pitifully small royalties before any deductions.  We would like to see this money distributed by PPL as they are well placed to do this in a fair and transparent way.

Of course, we would have preferred it if the EU were to adopt the same system as the USA where copyright reverts back to the creator after 35 years but this is a significant step forward for featured artists.

The full text of the directive can be read here:

http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/copyright/docs/term/2011_directive_en.pdf

FAC response to Government IP position

In light of the Government’s response to the Hargreaves Review, the Featured Artists Coalition (FAC) is issuing the following statement:
We welcome the Government’s response and hope that the next, more detailed consultation process doesn’t serve to dilute the strength of Hargreaves recommendations.

We also hope that even if existing rights holders find it difficult to put their content onto the Digital Copyright Exchange, there are a huge number of artists who control their own rights who will be very enthusiastic to sign up to it. The FAC is very interested to play a constructive role in making that a reality.

Should you wish to contact us for further details or info please do not hesitate to contact me on joe@thefac.org or 02070093800

Backstage In Brussels: FAC And Younison EU Update

FAC CEO Mark Kelly, board member Crispin Hunt and special advisor Jeremy Silver recently went to Brussels to team up with the organisation Younison.

Why?

Here is the lowdown from the Director of Younison and friend of the FAC, Kelvin Smits (pictured).

What is Younison?

Younison is the first pan-European pressure group that strives to get the voice of music artists heard by politicians at the European Union (EU) level.

The main focus – with support from the FAC – is to make sure the European Commission (EC), the executive body of the EU, takes into consideration artists’ needs whilst drafting a new directive on collective rights management.

What is the problem that needs fixing?

One of the main problems is the way collecting societies (e.g. SACEM, GEMA) operate throughout the EU. For various reasons, these organisations can end up accruing large amounts of money which cannot be distributed to members, sometimes for years. We want all European collecting societies to agree to be more transparent about how collection and distribution of money occurs.

There is also a growing need for a pan-EU licensing system [like the digital rights exchange suggested in the recent Hargreaves Report], in line with the European single market. Currently only companies with considerable resources can afford the time, effort and money needed to license music in all European territories, smothering growth for a middle tier of music businesses and, by extension, artists.

Who in the EU can help?

The legislation that concerns collecting societies is being written by Commissioner Barnier (France), in charge of the Internal Market

Three other Commissioners also have influence

  • Vice-President Kroes (Netherlands / Digital Agenda)
  • Vice-President Almunia (Spain / Competition)
  • Commissioner Vassiliou (Cyprus / Culture)

What was the recent event? Why was it important?

In March we were invited to meet with VP Neelie Kroes to offer her our recommendations. It is very important for artists to directly contact the top-level policy makers, so that their suggestions will be taken into account during the legislative process.

Following the meeting, she publicly backed us via Twitter (@NeelieKroesEU), saying that the Younison, DJ Monitor & FAC delegation “asked for increased transparency & fairer distribution of royalties. I agree. They have big ideas for the future”.

L-R Jeremy Silver (FAC), Crispin Hunt (FAC), Vice-President Neelie Kroes, Kelvin Smits (Younison), Mark Kelly (FAC), Joanne Scobie (Younison) and Yuri Dokter (DJ Monitor)

Last week (3rd week of June, 2011), Younison & FAC met up with VP Almunia who would like to encourage more competition between European collecting societies.

Next month we will be meeting with Commissioner Vassiliou and then in September, we will meet with Commissioner Barnier.

How is Younison & the FAC seeking to influence opinion?

By building up a network of friendly policymakers who can influence the directive’s passage through the EU Parliament, we aim to ensure that our 6 point Call for Action is included:

  1. Timely information disclosure
  2. Timely payments for all digital revenues
  3. Harmonised Transparency and Accountability requirements for all forms of digital exploitation
  4. Multi-territorial Licensing is about transparency and service competition
  5. Artists shall be free to choose their collecting society depending on which rights (and best service) they wish a given collecting society to represent them
  6. Global Repertoire Database initiative

We will be very busy in the European Parliament where we will try to get a majority of MEPs to endorse our Call for Action.

In March we held a debate in the European Parliament called ‘Collective Rights Management – What do Artists Need?’. The event was well attended by MEPs and their staff, and was a great first step in introducing Younison and the FAC to the EU.

It is expected that the Commission will finish drafting the legislation in January 2012 so we will be increasingly busy going into next year!

Kelvin Smits (Director, Younison)

Please follow Younison on Twitter

Like it on Facebook

Visit the website and signup

FAC / MMF Letter To Prime Minister

A letter to David Cameron referring to Professor Ian Hargreaves’ recent ‘Digital Opportunity‘ report on intellectual property and copyright, which recommends a one-stop Digital Copyright Exchange.

Dear Mr. Cameron,

We welcome Professor Hargreaves’ recent review, especially his proposals for the creation of a Digital Copyright Exchange. His common sense, pragmatic approach to the licensing of digital music rights is exactly what our industry needs.

The current environment for the licensing of copyrights is extremely complex and affords too much control to individual rights-holders to the detriment of new, innovative businesses coming to market.

The idea of creating an exchange to license rights collectively is already precedented. The collection societies PRS and PPL have successfully licensed music for TV and radio for many years with their existing databases. The goal of a ‘one-click licensing solution’ is achievable if we adapt the systems we already have in place.

Fears this may lead to a ‘race to the bottom’ on the pricing of music are understandable, but unfounded. Rights-holders would set prices as they have always done. Collection societies should only compete on service and their own transaction costs, not on the price of the material they license.

Professor Hargreaves’ idea that the anti-piracy benefits of the Digital Economy Act should only be available to those progressive companies who join a Digital Copyright Exchange is both sensible and fair.

A simpler, more efficient licensing environment would reverse the decline in the recorded music market and stimulate growth. Increasing transparency would ensure creators, young and old, get paid. The benefits to Britain in job creation and our continued global export success are vital.

Establishing a Digital Copyright Exchange is the first step to achieving these goals.

We should resist any who claim it is unworkable. With will, cooperation and support from government it is very achievable.

This is an opportunity for the UK government to help create the best copyright licensing system in the world. It is not a small task but it can be done. We urge you to continue to show leadership and make this happen.

FAC Board

Sandie Shaw, Ed O’Brien, Nick Mason (Co-Chairs)
Mark Kelly (CEO)
MMF Board

Brian Message (Chairman)

Jon Webster (CEO)

Paul Burger

Charlie Carne

Tim Clark

Carol Crabtree

Ian McAndrew

Gary McLarnan

Erik Nielsen

Scott Rodger

Adam Tudhope

Other posts: The Featured Artists Coalition response to the Hargreaves Report

Important PPL Message from Head of Member Services

Important PPL Message from Penny White, Head of Member Services

To ensure our members receive more accurate payments, we are currently in the process of updating our systems. As a consequence, there will be changes that affect PPL members’ statements and how they access them.

To find out more, please visit ppluk.com/changes

Neelie and the Collecting Societies

European Commissioner Neelie Kroes is trying to tackle the issues surrounding European collecting societies, to improve the lot of the creator. FAC special advisor Jeremy Silver, CEO Mark Kelly and board member Crispin Hunt recently met her, to discuss the matter further.

Jeremy Silver writes:
I was in Brussels last week for a meeting with Neelie Kroes. As Vice President of the Commission, she is undoubtedly a powerhouse in Europe, but she is down to earth, pragmatic and determined to get the right thing done. Her spacious, airy office, magnificently decorated with contemporary Dutch art, evokes the feeling of modern, twenty first century policy-making at its most vibrant and transparent.  It stands in stark contrast to the musty panelling of  other more ancient systems like the UK’s Westminster.
There were  six of us, a Dutch technologist, a delegation from the Featured Artists Coalition and two representatives of Younison, a European artists and authors organisation.  We sat around her glass table with the senior members of her Cabinet to discuss ways in which collecting societies might be improved upon and made more transparent. Issues of governance were discussed, as well as questions arising out of the need to collectively license across all rights not sub-sets of rights.
One of the interesting  aspects of the shift to digital is  the analogue separation of the publishing and recording right in music. This  was done to make more money for the then new technology-empowered recording rights holders. It is now clearly so inefficient and acts as so much of a disincentive to new businesses and potential licensees of music, that many believe it would make more money if those rights were bundled back together again. Ms Kroes has clearly taken this point on-board – as well as recognising the frequent degree of detachment of the recording right owners from any interest in the daily work  and livelihoods of the creators themselves.
Another aspect of this modernisation effort is that the collecting societies were set up because of a shared belief that collective rights management for licensing of consumer services was likely to be more efficient than individual rights owners managing it. Broadcasters and other mass users of music were not about to go striking individual licenses with individual rights owners, if they could avoid it. National and network broadcasters in Europe especially have demanded collective licensing if creators are to get paid.
But in lots of parts of Europe, creators suggest, the collecting societies have not been able (or willing?) to keep up with the times. Many argue that they have not collaborated to be more efficient or to make it easier for customers to do business with them.  Independent observers have commented that the societies have not tried very hard to bring together the management of publishing and recording rights. Others point out that they have not sought to form Boards that are truly and proportionately representative of their membership (except in a few cases in the UK and the Netherlands).  And the technologically savvy are frustrated that they have not tried to use much technology to make their tracking more accurate and move away from a sampling of performances and a pro rata payment scheme which favours the biggest artists,  towards a proper tracking system that could pay creators for actual plays.
The data is available and the technology has been well tested over the last ten years but critics observe, even the PPL, regarded  by many as one of the more progressive societies, has only just in the last year or so started to consider using media play tracking technology – in a pilot scheme.
Neelie Croes wants to see all this modernised and wants to see much fairer remuneration for creator members of collecting societies. She seems to have a fight on her hands though. The lobbyist power of the major labels and publishers who sit behind the collecting societies and the societies themselves make it hard to enforce change. Monsieur Barnier who is one of her other commissioners who is tasked with writing the directive on the subject, has delayed its publication by a year. The Collecting Societies argue that there is nothing that needs fixing, that they don’t need regulation and that they can put their own house in order.
The European Repertoire Database, a project of the Commission, has been underway for sometime but still has failed to embrace both publishing and recorded work data.
Progress is undoubtedly possible here,  but it will require a lot more political will than is demonstrated currently by anyone – except perhaps by Ms Kroes herself – and given her track record for making the Telco’s drop extortionate roaming charges and forcing Microsoft to compensate for the monopolistic  bundling of Internet Explorer with Windows – she is a force to be reckoned with – as well as a great collector of artworks – and political trophies!

Jeremy Silver is an entrepreneur, digital media adviser and thought-leader. He serves as an adviser to the Featured Artists Coalition.

Here is a quick video of the delegation meeting Ms Kroes.

FAC Submission to Hargreaves Review of Intellectual Property and Growth

In the UK, Professor Ian Hargreaves is currently leading an independent review for the government into how the intellectual property system can better drive growth and innovation. The issues being considered could have a major impact the way music will be shared and monetised in the future,  and we felt it was important that the artist’s perspective was heard in the debate. The Featured Artists Coalition (FAC) and Music Managers Forum (MMF) made a joint submission representing the interests of Featured Artists on the 4th March 2011. These are the key points made: (You can also read the full 16 point submission here.)


The digitisation of music has significantly changed the role of the artist in the marketplace. The means of distribution, once the sole preserve of the record companies, are now at our disposal.

However, the artist that wishes to make a living selling their own work from a self-administered website is often prevented from doing so by contracts which in their form and content fail to reflect the changes that digitization has brought.

As a result, many artists now find themselves on both sides of the issue that is currently challenging the way the record industry does business: how do we protect copyright while at the same time allowing creative exploitation of copyrighted material in a manner which benefits artist, label, publisher and consumer?

The Featured Artists Coalition (FAC) and the Music Managers Forum (MMF) have been working together on this for some time and have come up with the following suggestions:

  1. We believe that the first step towards monetising unauthorized consumer activity is to convince consumers that the money they spend will end up in the pockets of the artists they love. Giving artists the right to act as retailers of their own material, the rights to which are owned by their former and current record labels, should help them to retain 50% of receipts and, in turn, produce greater returns for the labels on material that they may no longer be promoting.
  2. We want a new system of collective licensing that encourages greater commercial use of our work. At present, a start-up digital service would need more than 20 licenses to roll out across the EU. Such collective licensing would assist both artist and consumer by allowing, amongst other models, music subscription services to be bundled into domestic broadband/telecom packages.
  3. We believe that artists should have the right to know the details under which their work is being exploited. Many deals between the people who own our copyrights and internet services wishing to exploit them are covered by non-disclosure agreements. Artists have no way of knowing if they have received any royalties that have accrued from such a deal. Record companies, publishers and collection societies have a fiduciary duty to inform artists on what basis they are being paid.
  4. We would like to see all transfer of copyright to be by license only with assignment being outlawed as it is in Germany and that any transfer of copyright should be limited to 35 years as it is in the USA, ensuring that copyright is transferred to the creator at least once during copyright term. Copyrights not being exploited should be returned to the creator.
  5. As artists, we need changes in contract law to correct the current imbalance of power in a record industry that are still largely shaped by the business practices of the analog era. We believe that by working with the industry to bring new and preexisting contracts into the digital age, we can offer the consumer the kind of products that they want whilst at the same time making the case for fair remuneration.

For more information on this topic you may wish to read the full 16 point FAC / MMF submission.

Opinion – Sale Of Tickets Bill – by Crispin Hunt

“Sharon Hodgson’s Sale of Tickets (Sporting and Cultural Events) Bill

Crispin Hunt

Crispin Hunt

This Bill should be welcomed by Sport and Culture Fans and Artists alike. In my opinion Sharon Hodgson’s Sale of Tickets (Sporting and Cultural Events) Bill tackles exactly the type of issue a Private Members Bill was designed to deal with and, contrary to Ben Cardew’s opinion in Music Week , ( http://www.musicweek.com/story.asp?storycode=1043967 ),  Private Members Bills are often warmly received by Government and Parliament as a means of directly addressing an issue whilst, at the same time, avoiding the lengthy procedures that surround Government Legislation.
[Read more...]

FAC statement on “on air on sale”

Universal Music UK and Sony UK have announced that, on February 1st 2011, they will begin trialling the synchronisation of date of sale and the date of release to radio of music tracks.

This is something that many artists have been asking for for some time as many believe the practice of releasing to radio before retail damages sales, encourages music fans to illegally download tracks and distorts the music charts. Alongside the FAC, supporters of this change in practice include the MMF, the Musician’s Union and AIM.

The Featured Artists Coalition is issuing the statement below.

We welcome the move by several of the major and independent labels to move to same day retail and airplay single releases. This is a change we have been pushing for for some months. We believe artists will benefit from increased sales, fewer illegal downloads from fans who want to own the music as soon as they hear it, and a more accurate chart which reflects undistorted consumer behaviour.

If you would like to interview one of the FAC members please call Angie Moxham on 07889 209950 or Andrew Burton on 07584 340 670.

PPL Members – Closing Royalty Distribution Date – April 26th

Below is a message from PPL:

Benefit from old monies held
PPL Policy change to bring benefits to both performers and record companies.

Up to now, PPL, has at its discretion, operated a policy of seeking to distribute monies to members relating to sound recording usage from as far back as 1996 (or in respect of record company members, from the date of joining PPL). This has previously applied even where income relates to usage falling outside the six year statutory limitation period.

With effect from July 2010, as part of our ongoing systems development programme, we are intending to change this policy so that we will only distribute income relating to sound recording usage within the applicable statutory limitation period of six years.

Up until 26 April 2010, we will continue to accept claims under the existing discretionary policy for income relating to use of a track between 1996 and 2003.  After 26 April 2010, any accepted claims will only receive distributions for sound recording usage within the applicable six year statutory limitation period. Because of this it is important that you ensure that we have all of your up-to-date details.

This change of policy will enable PPL to release previously undistributable income to its members (relating to sound recording usage between 1996 and 2003). This discretionary release of income will be carried out in accordance with guidelines to be set by the PPL Board and Performer Board.

This is a positive change that will ensure that held income is distributed within a reasonable period of time.

If you have any questions or want to make a claim, please contact PPL Member Services.