Music Business

Music Publishing News Roundup 7.10.2015

Harry_fox_sesac_650

It was an active week in music publishing. SESAC  acquired the Harry Fox Agency, new stats confirm YouTube's popularity as  a streaming music service,  and musicians used a MoveOn.org petition to push Apple for more recognition.

Nashville based Performing Rights Organization SESAC has bought the Harry Fox Agency. Though the acquisition has yet to be approved by the NMPA membership, this new deal now allows for both mechanical and sync licensing to be combined after being treated separately in the music publishing world for many years. This finally transforms a once “complex, opaque and currently inefficient licensing regime” into a more straightforward process.

Youtube is currently the world’s most popular streaming service. Prevailing as a free service, the video giant has increased its market share of total on demand streams since the start of 2015 both in the US and the UK. Overshadowing its competing audio services, Youtube is the leading streaming service in both volume and growth, seeing a stream volume increase of 109.2% to 76.6 billion in the first half of this year.

A MoveOn.org petition has been launched to display album credits on Apple Music. Bassist Jon Burr, the man behind the campaign, knows this will “be a burden” on Apple, but is aiming to create a “cultural shift” involving recognition for musicians, lyricists, engineers, and all those who contribute to the making of albums. Apple Music’s main competitors Spotify and Pandora also do not display album credits during streaming, meaning this could be an opportunity for Apple to continue as an ally to the creative community and be even more innovative in streaming. 

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3 Comments

  1. “this new deal now allows for both mechanical and

      sync
      licensing to be combined after being treated separately in the music publishing world for many years”
      Is this a typo? Did you not mean “mechanical and
      performance
      licensing”? I do not see any major specifics RE: sync licensing in the billboard or NY Times article.
  2. “this new deal now allows for both mechanical and sync licensing to be combined after being treated separately in the music publishing world for many years”
    Is this a typo? Did you not mean “mechanical and performance licensing”? I do not see any major specifics RE: sync licensing in the billboard or NY Times article.

  3. Both fix and SESAC do a certain amount of sync licensing to those members that opt in to it

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