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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0Back, Bartok, Schubert, Puccini and Wagner wrote their compositions hundreds of years ago before the idea of copyright was even a glint in an intellectual property attorney’s eye, so they’re in the public domain. But are they? It turns out it’s getting tougher and tougher to post the music of the classical greats by a performer today without receiving a notice of a copyright violation from some company somewhere. The problem is that most of them are fraudulent claims, but that doesn’t keep them from happening and making a classical performer’s life a little more miserable.One case is pianist James Rhodes who put an innocent enough video of one of his Bach performances on his Facebook page and received a copyright violation notice from Sony Music Global claiming that they owned 47 seconds of his performance. The composer has been dead for 300 years, but that didn’t stop Sony from claiming ownership.The German music professor Ulrich Kaiser found that it was nearly impossible to post anything by any of the major composers because a number of companies claimed they owned the catalogs of these classical music giants.Challenge Of Posting Classical Music Without Copyright Violation: A Glimpse Of The Future?
Despite the composers having died hundreds of years before the concept of copyright violation had even appeared on scene, performers are now finding it difficult to post their performances of. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2018/09/glimpse-of-the-future-the-challenge-of-posting-cl