Also what happens if you lose contact with the other writers and you want to place the song in a library?
Thanks.

![]() ![]() ![]() |
Moderators: admin, mdc, TAXIstaff
good call.TheElement wrote:Thanks guys. I thought that. @ Andy..Bahamas..LOL
Well I guess I will have to retire that song as the master is also owned by someone else. This is one of the reasons why I started producing my own stuff. Now I own everything.
Thanks for the info. Yeah this song was written years ago and we were all unprofessional. We didn't know what we were doing. So I guess now I have great advise from professionals on how to write professionally I am more careful who I write with now. I have to let these songs go and move on to better songs. The past is not my future.Kolstad wrote:Actually, if you anticipate the risk of loosing contact with someone, you can spell out in the agreement that the remaining parties will have leeway to pitch and promote the song without the third members consent (if contact can't be established). I've seen agreements like that before.
After all, the whole purpose of a written agreement is to protect the project and the participants. In a written agreement you would also put contact information like address, phone and email. If any of those changes, it's the cowriter's responsibility to notify the other cowriters.
But if it's a project you already have, and things have slipped without a written agreement, you are probably in trouble. Only exeption is if you're in the US, and you've done the cowriting for a company (like a publisher ect.). In that case all rights automatically revert to the company as far as I know (but I'm no lawyer). In Europe, it wouldn't be so.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests