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4.5 cents per song Did anyone catch this news? Who still thinks having huge album sales is "all that?" Would you rather be Prince, who can sell 500,000 albums and have huge tours, own his music, but get hardly any radio or video play?...or one of the bands signed to a major label? Tell me, what's more important? Selling 2 million albums and getting 30%,and an amazing 4.5 cents per online sale, or selling 500,000 and getting much more and actually owning your music?
----- Cheap Trick, Allman Brothers Sue Sony 04/28/2006 1:31 PM, AP David B. Caruso Rock bands Cheap Trick and The Allman Brothers Band are suing Sony Music, claiming they are being shortchanged on royalties for songs downloaded legally over the Internet. The suit, filed at a federal court in Manhattan, claims Sony has failed to live up to a contract requiring that it pay its musicians half of the net revenue it receives from licensing songs to download services like iTunes and Napster. Sony has been paying the aging rockers less than that amount, in part because their record deals predate the existence of legal music sales over the Internet. According to the suit, the record company is treating digital downloads like traditional record sales, rather than licensed music, triggering a different royalty deal. Under that old rubrik, the record company deducts fees for the kind of extra costs they used to incur when records were pressed on vinyl, including packaging charges, restocking costs and losses due to breakage. Tracks sold over the Internet usually go for about 99 cents. About 70 cents of the sale price goes to Sony. The bands are getting about 4 1/2 cents per song, according to the suit, rather than the approximately 30 cents they claim is rightfully theirs. "I feel strongly that the record company is doing the wrong thing," said Brian Caplan, an attorney for the bands. A spokesman for Sony BMG did not immediately respond to inquiries about the lawsuit. The bands are seeking to have the suit declared a class action, which would cover all Sony artists who signed deals between 1962 and 2002. The Allman Brothers Band signed its current Sony deal in 1989. Cheap Trick's deal dates to 1976. While the amount of money at stake per song is small, it could add up to millions of dollars for Sony if a court rules for the bands. Caplan estimated that there may be 2,500 recording artists covered by the class. Sony Music is part of Sony BMG, a joint venture of Sony Corp (NYSE:SNE - news). and Germany's Bertelsmann AG. "Don't you think one of the charms of marriage is that it makes deception a necessity for both parties?" | |
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Prince chose exactly the right time to go independent and get a bigger slice of the profits from his albums . He may have disappeared from the public radar a bit in the mid to late 90s but , despite the relatively fewer people who were buying his albums , he was monetarily a verrrry happy bunny . Check out Chocadelica , updated with Lotusflow3r and MPLSound album lyrics April 2nd 2009 :
http://homepage.ntlworld....home2.html | |
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Nobody can ever say that Prince is a dummy. He told you himself that"he don't know Bo, but he does know math" and he's right. No one else should get rich off of his work but himself . | |
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That's just so typical of record companies, treating online music the same way as packaged CDs. They just refuse to accept that they are going to have to get used to smaller profits these days. If a packaged CD costs $10, then an online version without the CD, packaging, plastic, production, artwork, design, distribution, etc etc should just cost, like $2 dollars or something! | |
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