FAC Christmas Newsletter 2010

Hi there!

Welcome to the Christmas newsletter from the Featured Artists Coalition, sent to you from the FAC Board and FAC Co-Chairs, Sandie Shaw, Nick Mason (Pink Floyd) and Ed O’Brien (Radiohead). We wish you a very Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year!

Thank you to our members and followers for the incredible amount of support that you have shown over the past year

More than ever, we believe that its essential there should be a collective voice representing recording artists ‘at the table’. We’ve been learning fast about how to go about doing just that, and we’ll be working hard over the next 12 months. We’re also very excited about our new internal action team, who are planning increased benefits and exciting events for members in the New Year.

Please get in touch with your thoughts and theories, grievances and gripes, suggestions and sage wisdom, via Facebook, Twitter (@featuredartists), email (info@featuredartistscoalition.com) or our website.

There’s been a lot happening behind the scenes recently…

During 2010

  • We created a new alliance with the Music Managers Forum and the Musicians’ Union to combine our forces where our objectives are the same.
  • In particular we’ve been making progress on the issue of ‘On Air On Sale’. Many artists believe that if you make a single available for a radio station to play, you should also have the choice to make it available for fans to download. It may have made sense in the old days to maximise chart position by delaying, but today that just looks like an invitation to file-share where the fan would have been happy to make a legal purchase. Several of the major labels are in agreement and will be changing their practices! Let us know what you think.
  • We have also been pushing the idea of the artist as a retailer. We believe that every recording artist ought to be able to sell their own recordings from their own website (without infringing their record contract, and taking a fair share of the proceeds as retailer as well as as artist). Many of the labels, thanks to the BPI team, are coming into agreement with us and want to help to make this happen, but it is also down to you- the artists- to help make it easy for fans to engage. We have still got some tricky questions to answer on how to handle recordings that are deleted but that an artist would like to sell. Suggestions on that thorny topic would be greatly appreciated! Click here to join the discussion on our Facebook page.


Looking forward to 2011

  • We’re planning an introduction to online music-based services for artists unsure about which platforms do what, and what is appropriate for their careers.
  • We’re going to Westminster in March to defend our corner with representatives from other creative industries.
  • A female artists’ creative workshop is in the pipeline, headed up by Ms Sandie Shaw and Rumer.
  • We’re also going to be taking a stern look at the state of artists’ contracts with labels, and see what there is to be done about achieving fairer, more equitable deals with music industry partners going forward.

More musings from the board…

If you are interested in hearing more thoughts from the board there are personal Christmas messages on the FAC website:

Nick Mason:
“Originally I thought the FAC would involve me in a little light emailing and the occasional meeting…in fact it’s a torrent of emails and ideas, lots of meetings, talking and…” [read more]
Ed O’Brien:
“I spent most of the last year in the studio working on our new album… Despite this, had a brilliant couple of days with music students at Dartmouth and Falmouth…” [read more]
Sandie Shaw: “I have been a Chair of FAC for a few months now. It is a bit like riding a wild bucking bronco (this should only be attempted with a seat belt and a crash helmet).” [read more]

Again, a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all, please don’t hesitate to drop us a line.

The FAC board

ps. If you signed the charter, or signed up as a supporter, you are not necessarily a full member of the Featured Artists Coalition. Don’t panic- we are addressing this with a new membership strategy in the new year! News to follow.

pps. Take it easy on the sherry…

pps. Thanks to everyone who came to the FAC Christmas party. If you want to see some pictures from the event have a look below or for the full story, click here!

FAC XMAS PARTY!

FAC April Newsletter

MONEY: April 26, PPL Closing Distribution
EVENT: April 29, The Great Music Debate
EVENT: May 6, City Showcase
EVENT: May 13-16, TGE 2010
EDUCATION: May 29-31 & July 10-12, Apple Logic 101
Hi Everyone,

We hope that you’re doing well and are getting limbered up for festival season.  Summer is certainly set to be a good one this year – let’s just hope that it stays sunny and dry!

With our warming and lengthening days there is a lot on for you to sink your teeth into:

ATTENTION! PPL Members – Closing Royalty Distribution Date – April 26th

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.

[Read more...]

April Newsletter – WHERE MONEY IS MADE, ARTISTS SHOULD BE PAID

WHERE MONEY IS MADE, ARTISTS SHOULD BE PAID

PROTECT YOUR COPYRIGHTS AND EARN FROM THEM

WIN BACK YOUR BACK CATALOGUE

HAVE A SAY IN SHAPING THE NEW DIGITAL MUSIC INDUSTRY

JOIN THE FEATURED ARTISTS COALITION

The Featured Artists Coalition (FAC) is a new non-profit organisation for those of us whose names, as individuals or bands, appear on the front of our albums. It is not owned or operated by any other representative body – the FAC is wholly independent and open to all UK featured artists. We have come together to campaign for artists’ rights in the new digital environment at a time when governments are acting to frame laws on copyright that will affect our industry for years to come.

Ownership – we believe that all artists should own their own work and only sign licensing deals with labels. Since its inception less than a month ago, the FAC has already argued our case at the highest levels, gaining a seat at the table alongside the BPI, AIM, PPL and MU to discuss with government ministers the planned extension of copyright in recordings from 50 to 70 years. We are arguing for all rights in recordings to return to the artists 50 years after their initial release.

Monetisation – we believe that the music industry is wrong to prosecute those who download music for personal use. We argue that, so long as they do not profit from this practice, they should be left in peace. We do not wish to encourage illegal downloading, but seek instead to monetise it, either through a blanket license which allows a user to access as much music as they want or by taking a fair cut from the advertising revenue of a music or video website. It is those who are making money exploiting our work without paying us a fair royalty who should be the target of industry anger. Where money is made, artists should be paid.

Transparency – we believe that deals recently signed between major labels and internet platforms have not been done in the best interests of artists. Most are covered by non-disclosure agreements that make it impossible to find out where the money is going. The evidence we have so far is that although millions of dollars have changed hands, none of this has been paid to artists. We are campaigning for a more transparent industry, discussing with government the possibility of introducing into law a fiduciary duty on rights owners to notify artists when they monetise catalogue.

Digital royalties – we are deeply concerned that many of us are still being paid royalty rates left over from a time when the record companies had to physically manufacture and distribute our material. Now, our music can be sent around the world by the click of a mouse. We demand royalty rates that reflect the true cost of digital distribution.

It is time to flex our collective muscle and let the industry know that we are no longer prepared to allow them to own forever the recordings that we ourselves paid for; that we will not stand idly by while they criminalise our audience; that we will not accept being paid analogue royalties on digital sales; that they can no longer get away with doing under-the-table deals with internet platforms.

To have influence within the industry, we need artists of all genres and ages to join with us to help ensure that the new digital environment is one in which we can benefit from the incredible potential that the internet offers. Our vision is one of artists owning, controlling and earning directly from their own material.

To join us, simply click here

The fee for membership is 5% of your UK PPL Performer income. This amount, which is fully tax deductible, will vary depending on how many times your recordings have been played in public. Hugely successful artists will pay more, while those who have yet to make their mark will pay next to nothing. We expect the average member to pay no more than a few hundred pounds a year.