Roylaties, rights and such for an arranger/producer

A creative space for business discussions.

Moderators: admin, mdc, TAXIstaff

Post Reply
User avatar
shellsings
Committed Musician
Committed Musician
Posts: 976
Joined: Mon Mar 15, 2010 12:50 pm
Gender: Female
Location: Germantown, MD
Contact:

Roylaties, rights and such for an arranger/producer

Post by shellsings » Sat Feb 12, 2011 11:44 am

Hello

I wrote a song, lyrics and melody, basic chords. My friend who plays and sings is helping spruce up the chord charts, will play and sing and do the recording. I will do some background vocals. He is not taking a fee for this, however So what kind of
rights does he have to the song?

since he is "producing it" , singing and playing on it. has said that "we" would own the Sound Recording, I would own the music and lyrics and as a prodcuer would get about 5% of any royalties.



I will copyright it as a SR , do I put him as a work for hire. He knows I own the rights, I just want to get our "contract" right. He may want some performance royalities if it gets picked up, but i think we are going to do that on the side and I want him to sign all rights to me so I can pitch to film and TV.

Just wanting to make sure I get this right.

User avatar
mojobone
King of the World
King of the World
Posts: 11837
Joined: Sat May 17, 2008 4:20 pm
Gender: Male
Location: Up in Indiana, where the tall corn grows
Contact:

Re: Roylaties, rights and such for an arranger/producer

Post by mojobone » Thu Feb 17, 2011 2:40 am

shellsings wrote:

since he is "producing it" , singing and playing on it. has said that "we" would own the Sound Recording, I would own the music and lyrics and as a prodcuer would get about 5% of any royalties.
"any royalties" isn't exactly right; you'd get the writer's share of publishing and mechanical royalties and he'd get half the performance royalties, which may or may not end up being 5% of total royalties, depending on the use. For instance, sheet music income would be split between you and the publisher, but your collaborator would be entitled to 50% of fees and royalties earned by the sound recording; not a bad deal, in my estimation, if you couldn't otherwise record/perform the work to a standard that can achieve placements, but it's best if you can pay your guy up front and get a signed 'work for hire' agreement. However, if you're doing modern dance-pop, where the drum and synth sounds are specific to the genre and the production is just as important as the melody and lyrics, it may be worth cutting him in for a percentage. (it's what you'd do if you were Ke$ha or Katy Perry and he were Swizz Beatz)
The Straight Stuff; Roots, Rock & Soul

http://twangfu.wordpress.com
http://twitter.com/mojo_bone

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests