Music Creator FAQs
What is Copyright?
How do I get paid?
How do I copyright a piece of music?
- Place the tape, CD, sheet music or the lyrics of the song/work in an envelope.
- Address the envelope to yourself and write the name of the song/work on the outside.
- Post the envelope to yourself by registered post.
- When you receive the envelope it is important to remember that you should NOT OPEN it. Make sure that the date is clearly stamped and that the envelope is completely sealed.
- Keep the envelope in a safe place (e.g. your solicitor’s office or a bank).
How often will I receive a royalty statement?
What is a royalty?
IMRO collects licence revenue from broadcasters, online music providers, venues, pubs, hotels and a wide range of business that use music and once these revenues are analysed they are paid in the form of Public Performance Royalties to the copyright owners of the works that are publicly performed.
I write music for film. What do I need to do?
How do I become a member of IMRO?
- That at least one of your works has been commercially recorded (proof required is a photocopy of the CD inlay card containing a barcode or catalogue number, or details of a commercially available download of orginal material) or
- That at least one of your works had been broadcast in the last two years (proof required is a letter from the producer of the radio or television show confirming that your work(s) was broadcast) or
- That at least one of your works has been performed live in public on at least twelve occasions within the last two years. (proof required is a letter from a venue owner/manager confirming that your work(s) was performed).
If I am in a band do all need to become IMRO members?
Can I copyright the name of my band?
Copyright law does not apply to names. You do however have two possible options to help protect the name of your band. Firstly, you could register the name of the band with the Companies Registration Office and should anyone else try to register this name they will be told of your existence.
You could also register your name as a trade mark or service mark and this can be done through the Patents Office. This would in effect stop anyone trading under this name in Ireland. You would also need to register this name for the rest of Europe and the World.
For more comprehensive information regarding both of these processes and the associated costs involved you should contact these offices directly.
On such matters it is recommended that you seek independent legal advice.
Can I still be a member if I am resident overseas?
I have a residency and I will also be playing at a number of festivals. Do I need to inform IMRO?
I write music for advertising commercials. How does IMRO treat these works?
Whether your piece of music is a composition, or a signature tune, or background music in a film, or music to an advertising jingle it is treated in exactly the same way by IMRO. A payment is made to you for the use of this music on radio or TV.
Specifically with regard to advertising jingles any writer getting involved in this side of the music business should ensure that the ad agency they are dealing with submits to radio and TV the correct music details. Usually an ad agency submits information about the product name, the music title used, the composer and the duration of the piece of music used in the advert. Please ensure with any of your dealings with ad agencies that you are 100% sure they have credited you correctly.
Do IMRO administer Grand Rights?
How long does copyright last?
Does registering a song with IMRO protect it from copyright infringement?
What’s the position if another artist is performing my songs?
In addition to all the information you supply to IMRO about your own gigs, IMRO is also continually surveying venues throughout Ireland to determine which works are being performed live. To supplement this information we also monitor all the National Press and all the major magazines finding out what gigs are on by established artists in established venues.
What can you do?
Ask the artist to send in their complete set lists to IMRO or, alternatively provide the set list to you which you can then pass on to IMRO. This set list should contain all the songs the artist performs, not just your songs.
If this proves to be difficult please provide IMRO with a contact number for the artist’s management or agent.
I’m a classical/contemporary composer. What information does IMRO need from me?
We need you to provide IMRO with all programme returns and dates and venues of perofrmances in which you are involved both in Ireland and abroad.
IMRO licences and collects royalties wherever possible for classical and contemporary recitals in Ireland and a specific payment is calculated for each separate performance. Where IMRO has sufficient information to licence the concert it will, and if it has sufficient information on the works performed at the recital or concert it will credit you with a payment. It is in your best interest to do this: although it may appear like self-management, it will indeed stand to you if you keep all your live gigs documented and ensure that all registration forms are completed properly.You can provide us with the above necessary information online through the Members Only section of this website by following the Members Login link at the top of this page.
Where does IMRO get all the information from?
What is a Grand Right?
This expression is generally understood to refer to performances of dramatico-musical works and ballets.
In IMRO’s Articles of Association:
– a dramatico-musical work means “an opera, an operetta, musical play, revue or pantomime, insofar as it consists of words and music written expressly therefor”
– a ballet means “a choreographic work having a story, plot or abstract idea, devised or used for the purpose of interpretation by dancing and/or miming, but does not include country or folk dancing, nor tap dancing, nor precision dance sequences”.
How do I get royalties from a Grand Right?
How do I register a set and submit a gig? [Video]
How do I register a work? [Video]
What do I need to provide to IMRO if I am performing abroad?
In advance of you going abroad please let IMRO know –
- the dates of your gigs/concert
- the venues
- the set list you will be planning to perform on a night
IMRO will contact the society based in that country, notifying them that any royalties that may be collected on your behalf should be sent back to IMRO as soon as possible. This is by now an established practice with IMRO and one that ensures the society abroad has as much information as possible to make a correct payment to you in the future.
If you have not already done so please send into IMRO all foreign performance dates for which you have not yet received a payment.
This information can now be provided online through the Members Only section of the website by following the Members Login link at the top of this page.
How exactly are royalties generated?
I don’t recognise a work for which I’ve received a royalty. What should I do?
Do IMRO provide funding for projects?
What if someone uses my work without permission?
What is MCPSI?
Do we need to tell you if we are aware of a broadcast of our works?
IMRO receives its broadcast information from broadcasters in two ways – either through full census returns or by way of sample data. In situations where your works have been performed on stations where full census information is provided you will receive royalty payments. In the case of broadcasters who submit sample broadcast returns to IMRO, only those works featured on the sample date returns will qualify for royalty payments.
If you are aware of overseas broadcasts of your works please inform IMRO of this in order for us to draw this to the attention of the collection society in that territory.
What are Mechanical Royalties?
I’m an arranger of traditional works. Should I register them with IMRO?
You must register every song, tune or melody that you are writing, co-writing or that is traditionally arranged by you. If you fail to do this IMRO will be unable to identify the work as yours at the time of distributing royalties. It is extremely important that you register every song and that you do not exclude your arrangements of traditional works. Traditional works arranged by you are afforded exactly the same standard of payment as those that you have composed.
If you do not register these titles, you will lose out on royalties that should be paid to you. Please register all traditional arrangements that you are performing live or that are being broadcast on radio or TV as soon as possible.
I am an IMRO member – am I automatically a member of MCPS?
I have some songs. How do I go about getting them to performers?
As with most approaches to doing things in the Music Industry there is no standard or definitive way to going about this. However, one of the first things you should consider is which artist or performer is likely to record or perform the material that you have written. There is little point in contacting artists that have never recorded and are unlikely in the future to perform the type of music that you are trying to get out there. Once you have decided on an artist most suited to your material the best approach is usually to send a demo of your material to the artists manager, publisher or record company. Many companies do not like receiving unsolicited material so it is important for you to do some research on who is the best person to send the material to and in what form.
If you have no particular artist in mind for your songs you could target specific music publishers with samples of your work. Again it is important to send your demo to publishers who are interested in your particular style of music. There is little point in sending heavy rock music samples to a publisher who specialises in traditional music.
MCPS Membership Criteria
- own or control the copyright in one or more piece of music (i.e. be unpublished)
- have one or more pieces of music (unpublished) released for retail purposes by a record company (other than one you own), or recorded into radio, TV, audio-visual or multimedia production and download.
Copyright and Traditional Music
Introduction
The idea that copyright legislation and its enforcement interferes with or undermines the freedom of citizens to enjoy fully the fruits of a nation’s artistic tradition is false. Copyright conveys certain rights on creators in order to stimulate creativity. It is only given for a limited length of time and, particularly in the area of public performance, is also limited in the circumstances under which it arises. The almost universal duration of copyright extends to the lifetime of the creator and 70 years after death. Once this period has expired, all the creative input of a particular creator ceases to attract copyright protection and the public is then free to use the material as they see fit. Such material is described as being in the ‘public domain’.Arrangement of Non-Copyright Music
Amongst the important rights granted under copyright legislation is the entitlement to prevent an adaptation of a copyright work. By virtue of this right, plagiarism, an unauthorised copying or imitation, is unlawful where the subject matter in question is copyrighted. The prohibition ceases, however, upon the expiration of the term copyright. It will be seen that it is quite normal for such material to be used by creators as basis or foundation of further creativity. The most obvious example of this is the field of opera, where pre-existing literary works, the copyright of which has long expired, are adapted with musical accompaniment resulting in the creation of an entirely new copyright work. The plays of Shakespeare have not only been used in opera but also in films, West Side Story being a good example. The works of the American composer, Stephen Foster, have been repeatedly used as a basis of new work, as indeed has the so called ‘Hillbilly’ music of the Appalachians in the southern part of the United States. That music originally emanated from England and Scotland and now forms the foundation of much of the so-called ‘Nashville sound’. In relation to traditional or folk music, almost all the great classical music masters have used this music in their compositions. Brahms, Dvorak, Beethoven, Delius and Vaughn-Williams are obvious examples where the indigenous music of a nation has been used in a new form of expression.Legal Protection of Copyright Music
The vast majority of countries throughout the world have signed the Berne Convention, which is the single most important international agreement relating to the protection of copyright. Article 2, para. 3 of that Convention explicitly recognises the creative merit of arrangements of works that are no longer the subject of copyright control. In doing so, it permits an entirely new copyright to be created on the basis of the arrangement. This is not to say that the original work has changed its legal nature of being free of copyright control. At all times, a work, the copyright term of which has expired, remains uncontrolled in its original state. It is only if an arrangement of that work is made, introducing new originality, that the issue of copyright arises and only then in the arrangement. In fact it is quite common for several copyright arrangements of the same work or tune to exist.The Legal Requirement of Copyright in Arrangements
Firstly, in order to qualify for copyright protection, the subject matter must be produced in some physical form. Originally, this was taken to mean in writing but now had been accepted as extending to the printed word, analogue, digital, audio and video performance. Copyright in a work does not come into existence simply by virtue of a performance. Secondly, for an arrangement of a non-copyright work to attract copyright protection it must fulfil the originality criterion. This criterion is determined in the event of a dispute by the courts by case law has indicated that a relatively low level of creative input or originality is sufficient to warrant copyright protection. In the case of Irish traditional music, no copyright issues arise when the music performed is part of a body of work that has been passed down from the time that would clearly indicate that any responsible copyright term has expired, and usually the origins of the music are anonymous. Variation and ornamentation tend to be the distinguishing features of the contemporary performance of this music. Such embellishments, however, do not create a new copyright arrangement because they exist only in the performance and not, as previously indicated, in any tangible form, such as writing or a recording. In such situations, it is presumed that artistic considerations only arise if the embellishments referred to are repeated by a third party. However, should recordings be made of such performances a right is recognised in those versions of the performance.Why is it important to put writer credits on CDs?
Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) Explained
I perform my works live, do I need to inform IMRO?
- the dates of your gigs
- the venues where you played
- set list(s) for these live performances
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