T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2251.1 | Take my music.......please! | LEDDEV::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Wed Jan 31 1990 10:25 | 23 |
|
Most composers copyright their original material. Since there
is no 'compenstation' stated here, I assume that the composer OWNS
the music, and not DEC. But this is a legal issue.
The question of who 'owns' the material depends on an agreement,
low budget or otherwise.
You might want to offer a token sum for performance rights to
a piece that someone writes (or has written) on their own time.
Say Channel 7 hears this theme and wants to BUY it. Now...who's
is it? DEC's? Yours? Theirs? Ours?
Then again, Im sure there are folks out there for which this
aspect isnt a priority...the "opportunity" just to get a cassette
to you is just as important to 'em. I can understand this.
So fellow commusic'ers...where do you sit?
ron
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2251.2 | don't give it away | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Wed Jan 31 1990 10:47 | 4 |
| I wouldn't do it. You should buy a record of production music. it
won't kill you.
Cable access stations can afford.
Tom
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2251.3 | "For value received ($0.05)..." | KOBAL::DICKSON | You could be an ocarina salesman | Wed Jan 31 1990 10:55 | 10 |
| I've been looking at the patent agreement recently, and a similar
arangement could work here. If you invent something and Digital does
not insist you transfer the patent to them, you keep the patent rights
to do with as you wish. BUT, Digital gets a royalty-free licence to
use it. For those concerned about this, something could probably be
worked out.
Any questions along these lines I will pass on to the people running
this project. My involvement is small, and I am acting as go-between
here because I speak both "languages".
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2251.4 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Wed Jan 31 1990 12:06 | 7 |
| You might give a listen to the old Commusic tapes. Anything of
interest and you could make contact. I would imagine most participants
would be happy to cut a $0.05 deal. Heck, some of us would pay to have
folks listen to our music. (The rest of us are in it for the big bucks,
of course.)
Steve
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2251.5 | price per "drop" | KEYBDS::HASTINGS | | Wed Jan 31 1990 13:29 | 17 |
| I got slightly involved with this kind of thing many years ago. I found
out that the usual way it was done was to have a record of various
types of music. If you wanted say... "busy" music there would be a cut
with an appropriate title and style.
When you decided to use some of the music in your film or whatever the
charge was based on the number of "drops", as in how many times you
"dropped" the needle of the record player to use the music. I am
reaching way back but I think the charge was $50 per "drop".
In the context of MIDI and taped music, it wouldn't be hard to figure
out an equivalent pricing scheme. All rights remain with the composer,
he/she is merely selling an exclusive licence to use all or part of a
piece of music.
Mark
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2251.6 | Plenty of stuff to choose from! | SALEM::DACUNHA | | Wed Jan 31 1990 15:37 | 17 |
|
So, how much music do you need? 1 minute/
10? 20? 60? 1000?
Do you want something generic or do you want
it taylored to your program?
send mail
Chris
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2251.7 | durations | KOBAL::DICKSON | You could be an ocarina salesman | Wed Jan 31 1990 16:57 | 4 |
| 10 and 20 second "buttons", and 2-minute show themes. A button is
a musical punctuation mark between program sections. Listen to
All Things Considered or Morning Edition on NPR to see how they are
used.
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2251.8 | cross atlantic production ? | UTRTSC::BRANCH_DELFT | | Fri Feb 09 1990 08:12 | 7 |
|
Should be a piece of cake, I just wrote the theme to a radioseries for
a voluntary hospital station,it took me less than a day. but who would
record it? I mean; I live in Holland
Bernd.
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2251.9 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | You could be an ocarina salesman | Fri Feb 09 1990 09:20 | 28 |
| We can proably find some people who can read music on this side of the
ocean. :) I can transcribe sheet music (if that is how you work) into
MIDI files. Then we just need to find someone with reasonable SGUs
and effects, and a sequencer, to tweak it and record it. (my
effectless TX81Z is probably not sufficient for anything but an
audition tape.)
I met with the organizers of this project yesterday. The purchase req
for the studio equipment is sitting on the final desk for approval.
The guy whose group is paying for it said "it will be signed - it is
just a question of when". They are going for low-end professional
gear, which is still expensive enough to make your jaw drop. I mean,
isn't $4500 for an 8 channel stereo mixer with no EQ or effects loops a
bit on the high side? Built like the proverbial tank, apparantly.
At the meeting they decided to spring for one open-reel tape machine to
record all the live programs. (Another $2000 or so - no Teac stuff
here. They want an Otari.) I'll be able to make dubs off that to send
samples to anyone who contributes, so you can hear people talking over
your music. :) That, and acknowledgement, is the only thing in it for
contributors. Just like volunteering at your local public radio
station.
This project makes constant training and information updates a regular
part of everyone's work experience. They are remodeling the space of
about three offices into the studio and storage space, all to serve a
group of around 100 people. I wonder how well it would work in
monster facilities like ZKO.
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2251.10 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | You could be an ocarina salesman | Fri Feb 09 1990 10:58 | 8 |
| A tip on doing buttons: you don't have to write a 10- or 20-second
thing from scratch. It can be lifted out of a longer piece.
Send manuscripts or tapes to
Paul Dickson
ZKO2-3/R56
I hope the tapes get through the mail room. This *is* work related.
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2251.11 | whatdoyawant | UTRTSC::BRANCH_DELFT | | Mon Feb 12 1990 04:05 | 11 |
| OK then, tell me specifficaly (rememeber, you gotta be speciffic to be
teriffic) what you want, a main tune? background music? What we call in
dutch "musical wall paper" (It's just there, while nobody pays
attention)? what style, rock, jazz, easy listening, folk? with or
without rhythm? What is it exactly for? how long? little pieces or one
biggy? If you havve information, you can also send it to
HLFS00::TIMA_240632. Don't send it to where this comes from, it's a
branch-wide acount.
Bernd
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2251.12 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | You could be an ocarina salesman | Mon Feb 12 1990 09:19 | 17 |
| This is basically news programming. What is needed is theme music
for such programs. Talk shows, prerecorded interviews, etc. Credits
will be read over the theme music at the end of some shows. Any style
is ok, keeping in mind that this is for industrial purposes, not
winning Grammy awards. No screaming guitars.
A typical radio theme is 2 to 3 minutes long. Can have A and B parts,
etc, but you don't have time for a lot of development.
"Buttons", 10 or 20 second snips used as punctuation *within* a
program (like between news segments), can be written from scratch or
extracted from larger work.
I asked "how much do you want" and they said "how much have you got?"
So the more the better; it gives them more to pick from. The programs
don't even have names yet. I think they will be running "name the
program" contests.
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