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Guest post by David Lowery of The TrichordistFrom now on that is what I intend to do.The pop and rock song is financially dead. I will no longer waste my time and energy with this endeavor. The ability to be paid fairly for my time and effort to create non-dramatic musical works has been decimated by the federal government.1) The DOJ Antitrust Division, flouting intent of law and constitutional limitations, has turned monopoly regulation on its head by treating songwriter licensing organizations as anti-competitive monopolies. Meanwhile they force us to license our work at below market rates to genuine-holy-shit-these-guys-are-a-danger-to-democracy information monopolies like Google and Amazon (and soon Facebook). To benefit these monopolies they force us to violate private contracts and subject us to ex post facto rule making. Meanwhile these monopolies through their trade organizations (for instance “The Mic-Coalition”) openly collude and conspire to lower rates to songwriters, Yet the DOJ antitrust division completely ignores this anti-competitive behavior. Lawyers shuttle back and forth between DOJ antitrust and Silicon Valleyand no one raises an eyebrow. It’s like the fucking Cali Cartel runs the joint. (Editor note: May I? The Mountain View Cali-fornia Cartel?)Loss Of Fair Pay And Why We Should All Write Rock Operas [David Lowery]
Here we look at how the legal action (and inaction) by those in the federal government and the Department of Justice in particular has it challenging for songwriters to be. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2017/09/loss-of-fair-pay-and-why-we-should-all-write-rock-operas.html]