This story continues to roll, theres no doubt this will turn nasty pretty quickly.
Quote:
While radio currently pays the songwriters who pen the music and lyrics, it doesn't have to pay the performers; by contrast, satellite radio and Internet radio have to pay both groups. As music label revenues have declined, labels and artists have naturally turned to what they see as a huge potential revenue source. The two bills under consideration in Congress would make all forms of broadcasting liable for public performance fees, but broadcasters militantly insist that they provide crucial promotional support for artists and should be able to keep spinning discs without paying.
Nothing says "I have disdain for your
ideas" like canned herring
The spat between artists and record labels on one side and broadcasters on the other has exploded into the open recently as Congress has taken up a piece of legislation that would force radio to start paying artists for music. At a House subcommittee hearing this morning, HR 4789 was marked up and passed on to the full committee for a vote, while S 2500 waits for action on the Senate side.
"Today's vote comes as a complete nonsurprise, given the House IP Subcommittee's history of support for the RIAA-backed tax on local radio stations," said the National Association of Broadcasters after the vote. "Despite today's action, there remains broad bipartisan resistance to the RIAA tax from members of Congress who question whether a punitive fee on America's hometown radio stations should be used to bail out the failing business model of foreign-owned record labels."
New tax or old loophole closed?
The rhetoric of taxation and punishment might seem a bit extreme, considering that radio does pay such a royalty already to songwriters and that other media have to pay the artists as well. Indeed, the artists claim that this isn't so much a tax as an attempt to close a Congressional loophole only brought about through the power of the broadcasting lobby back in the 1930s.
Nancy Sinatra (daughter of Frank) sent a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi this week in which she said that "the fact is people who do the work, regardless of any promotional effect either way, should have the right to be paid fairly for it." All other developed countries do require radio to pay performers.
musicFIRST, a group backed by the RIAA and SoundExchange, certainly has an argument to make, one that Congress is currently considering. But it's also not above stooping to odd publicity stunts, such as sending the National Association of Broadcasters a can of herring and then issuing a press release about it. The goal? To show that the broadcasters' arguments are nothing more than "red herrings." Clever.
The broadcasters weren't amused, with NAB Vice President Dennis Wharton saying that the stunt was "so lame that it barely warrants a response. Instead of sending fish to radio stations that advanced the careers of artists, RIAA should send food to the entertainers that foreign record labels have abused for decades."
The dig about "foreign record labels" should give you a clue about just how nasty this debate is going to get.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20 ... lties.htmlThere is of course a simple solution to this, i have a plan! The Radio stations should charge record companies for air play, and indeed chart shows, in fact the radio stations could actually charge more per song per play than the cartel wish to charge for allowing it to be broadcasted. Whilst i understand the main stream radio stations will want to continue to play the cartels music, i really feel its the stations that hold the cards here, they "could" refuse to play any Riaa members music, they could charge them to play it, they could refuse to broadcast the "charts" which ofc the cartel spend money on organising favourably to promote their artists. I suspect if the stations really apply the pressure, and indeed offer independant artists free air play, we may see a revolt of artists away from their traditional record companies, after all, for the vast majority of atists its self promotion in relation to their lucrative concerts they are most interested in, the record companies/cd sales are usually just a means to that end.
I will watch this story with interest as it develops.
