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Guest post by Patrick Healy of Berklee Online's TakeNoteWhen the Music Modernization Act was passed into law by the US Congress in 2018, it was heralded by the songwriting community as the last best hope to restructure the new digital music economy in a way that would treat songwriters equitably.Having spent the last several years trapped in a doomsday scenario in which the owners of master recordings collect almost five times more per Spotify stream than the creators of the song, songwriters and music publishers have high hopes that the MMA can restore the balance between songwriters and publishers, record labels and artists, and the digital service providers like Spotify, Apple, Amazon, YouTube and Pandora.To that end, the MMA provides for the creation of a new organization called the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) which is intended to change the way that mechanical licenses are granted and royalties are collected from the digital service providers. It will create a new, all-encompassing database that will issue blanket licenses for the use of all music on the various streaming platforms. The collective is in development now with the goal of going live in 2021.Needless to say, that’s a sizable undertaking and there are a lot of questions about how viable this will be in practice. Clearly, it will bring major changes to the publishing industry, which has clung largely to the same infrastructure for the processing of licenses and royalties over the past 50 years, despite all of the technological shifts that have rocked the industry during that time. If you’re a songwriter, whether you act as your own publisher or have assigned your publishing rights to an outside company, the game is about to change in a big way.So before the Music Modernization Act really takes effect in 2021 with the formation of the new Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC), here are four things you can do to be ready for it.1. Learn to Get AlongThere is nothing that has done more damage to the music publishing industry, and probably nothing more likely to torpedo the effectiveness of the new Mechanical Licensing Collective than the single most intractable problem in the entire music industry: the simple inability of songwriters to get along. I don’t mean “getting along” in the sense of going out for beers or a pizza and telling funny stories to each other. Songwriters are experts at that. I mean actually learning to work together in an organized way to handle the fundamental business of songwriting, which all comes down to working out the splits.Splits are just a matter of who owns what portion of any newly created song. But it’s the one thing that all the writers involved in a song have to agree on, other than the melody and the lyric, and ultimately it’s the one thing that no amount of legislation, blockchain technology, intervention from publishers, labels, or managers can solve. Sooner or later, all of the writers on the song have to speak to each other and come to some sort of agreement. Sooner would be good.The problem is that no song can be properly licensed or fully registered until everyone agrees on what share they own. Incomplete registrations that show only a portion of the ownership, changes in the ownership shares after a release, conflicting claims of ownership, and songs with uncleared samples or interpolations all clog the systems of ASCAP, BMI and HFA as well as the digital service providers that rely on those organizations, creating a nightmare of paperwork and confusion for everyone in the entire music ecosystem. In a business filled with worthy adversaries, songwriters turn out to be their own worst enemies.Any songwriter who claims to have never had a split issue with a collaborator is probably just telling you that they’ve never addressed the subject at all. Don’t be one of them.2. Try to Get OrganizedThe Mechanical Licensing Collective can only help you if your songs are actually in its system. If you have a sizable catalog of songs, that could mean a daunting task of data entry come 2021. Given that publishers, not individual songwriters, are the primary clients of the MLC, the technology will be built for bulk registrations, so that publishers can deposit data files containing the information for thousands of songs.In light of that, it might be time for a songwriter with a catalog of songs that stretches into the triple digits to think about investing in some kind of administrative software package common to the industry. If you can start getting your songs set up in something like Counterpoint now, you’ll be able to deliver all of those files, in a format that the MLC can accept, and deposit all your songs in one quick delivery once the MLC opens for business. While Counterpoint is the system most often used by the industry, you could also look into copyright management systems like DISCO, Songspace, and Auddly, or even just a simple spreadsheet. Whatever you use, prepare for a fair amount of information gathering and a descent into acronym hell. Even an Excel spreadsheet should include the International Standard Musical Work Code (ISWC) for each song (you can find that on the registration for the song at ASCAP, BMI or SESAC and it begins with the letter T), the names of all of the songwriters and their IPI/CAE numbers (if you can find them), all of the publishers and their IPI numbers (if you know them) and the International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) for any recordings of the songs that you’re aware of (you can sometimes look those up at SoundExchange).I know— it might be a good time to think about hiring an intern.3. Get Registered4 Steps Songwriters Should Take Now To Prepare For The Music Modernization Act
In 2018, the Music Modernization Act was passed into law. Hailed as a harbinger of justice, songwriters hoped the law would help restructure the digital music economy in such a. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/10/4-steps-songwriters-can-take-now-to-prepare-for-the-music-modern