The Daily Music Business Podcast

The Daily Music Business Podcast brings you advice for achieving your independent music career every day. Whether you are a new artist or an experienced professional, TDMBP brings you music business tips, strategies, and detailed steps for advancing your career in music from a variety of music business professionals. Though far from exhaustive, topics such as Spotify and Apple Music music streaming and playlisting, marketing, how to get signed, how to make more money with music, music production, and music publishing are covered in 15 minutes or less episodes. RIYL: DIY Musician Podcast, And the Writer Is…, Song Exploder, The Third Story, Questlove Supreme, Don’t Keep Your Day Job, Music Production Podcast, Damian Keyes, Punk Rock MBA, Brandman, Burstimo, Smart Rapper, Music Industry How To, Adam Ivy, Curtiss King.

https://www.soundtalentmedia.com/show/the-daily-music-business-podcast/

subscribe
share






episode 63: Three Ways to Determine Songwriting Credits


On this week's episode, Paul Phelps of Outerloop Coaching talks about three methodologies for determining the ownership percentage of your songs. This is important for publishing income and can have a huge impact on your career and the careers of those in your band.


Disagreement on who wrote what percentage of what hit song has broken up more bands than girlfriends and drugs combined. Communicating a strategy that is transparent to everyone will go a long way toward fostering great relationships within your band no matter what methodology you choose - and choosing a methodology at the START of your career is much, much cheaper than the consequences of NOT doing so later.


Excuse the bad camera lighting and primitive technology while we work out the kinks but we wanted to bring you great content in 2019, regularly. Visit us at www.outerloopcoaching.com and be sure to download our free Music Management Primer if you haven't already. You can get it on the site!


More Insight: https://found.ee/credits


Please share and comment below.


Songwriting credits have broken up more bands than girls and cocaine combined. When someone in the band believes THEIR contribution to a hit song is greater than you do - nobody cares until the checks start to come in. And then everyone lawyers up and life gets really, really expensive.


Not only do you need to be open and communicative about each song's songwriting credits, you also need to have an OVERALL STRATEGY.


I have THREE strategies I recommend. The socialist, the pacifist, and the capitalist strategies.

Socialist strategy - everyone in the band gets equal credit


Pacifist strategy - everyone who took part in the songwriting process gets equal credit


Capitalist strategy - only the songwriters get credit and in proportion with their contribution to the song (must be negotiated)


Everyone's situation is different and everyone's situation can change. The most important factor is to make sure you are communicative and transparent about your strategy. AND be communicative and transparent about how the credits are being distributed EVERY time. Use paper! Write it down! If you email or text the credits for approval - get a response!


The above video is not meant to be a primer on music publishing - go here for that - but is a crucial but rarely discussed aspect of the music publishing process. Remember, everyone is human and your goals should include the talented people you have surrounded yourself with. How songwriting credits are distributed can be one of the most important ways you reward those you want to encourage to be productive. But this productivity MAY not be the songwriting itself. It MAY be more important to you to "keep the band together" than to distribute out the (potentially tons of) morsels to only those who actually wrote the melodies.


Just a quick reminder that Release It Right goes through a TON of the pre-recording steps you need to consider. Make sure to check out that course!

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices


fyyd: Podcast Search Engine
share








 August 4, 2020  5m