Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Congress To Again Consider Radio Royalties For Artists

The decades-old debate about how royalties should be paid when a song plays on the radio has re-emerged, with Congress taking up the issue and record labels breaking new ground by striking private deals with broadcast companies.

According to USAToday, the battlefront is in Nashville, where performers, labels, songwriters, publishers and radio stations accustomed to working side-by-side have renewed their disagreement. And it comes against the backdrop of Warner Music announcing a breakthrough deal last week to collect royalties when its artists have a song played on one of Clear Channel's 850 radio stations.

At stake are tens of millions of dollars in performance royalties that federal law exempts broadcast companies from paying to artists and labels for songs broadcast on terrestrial radio. Those payments go exclusively to the songwriters and publishers, as has been the arrangement for decades.

Mel Watt
But U.S. Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C., said the time for change has come. He plans to file legislation soon that would recognize performance royalties for artists and require broadcast companies to negotiate royalty arrangements with labels. In 2009, Watt and others in Congress pushed the Performance Rights Act, which would have mandated a new royalty for artists and labels when a song is played on traditional radio.

The 2009 bill cleared the House Judiciary Committee, but never reached a floor vote over pushback against that mandate. In response, Watt said his new bill instead would recognize performance royalty rights and require broadcast companies and labels to work out their own arrangements over royalty payments.

"I've felt that it was unfair for AM/FM stations to use the works of artists to make money for themselves without paying the artists whose stuff they're using," Watt said

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