I read a very interesting article this week entitled Who
Killed the Contemporary Christian Music Industry by Tyler Huckabee. Although I am not a huge fan of the Christian
music industry (ironic – since I am a Contemporary Christian artist) I found
this article to be very informative. I
decided quote it (via link) as this week’s post.
This blog discusses the ups and downs of being a singer/songwriter, home studio owner and music teacher. Topics are based on my personal experiences. I am open to topic suggestions which can be submitted through the contact page of my website (http://www.raymelograne.com).
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Monday, June 15, 2015
You Tube Copyright Infringement
One of
the areas I’ve branched out in lately is creating music instructional videos on
You Tube. My channel is Learning Music
With Ray; it contains videos on both music theory and music
performance. One of the struggles I’ve
run into is the question of whether or not it is legal to upload an instructional
video teaching how to play current popular music. In my case, I am looking to teach the piano
performance of Christian worship songs. However,
this question can be applied to the teaching of any popular song of which the
teacher does not own the copyright.
You
Tube has a video (You Tube Copyright School)
that explains the details about copyright infringement when uploading You Tube
videos. According to that explanation,
the safest way to ensure avoiding copyright infringement is to include only
original content in your videos. The law
does allow for the fair use of copyrighted
material under certain circumstances, but it is often difficult to determine if
a specific example qualifies legally as fair use. I am not sure whether or not my demonstration
of a popular worship song in a piano instructional video would be considered
fair use.
You may
be thinking, “So why don’t you just make videos teaching how to play your
original songs Ray?” That is what I have
done so far. However, my songs are not
exactly at the top of the Christian Contemporary charts right now. I’m sure people would be much more interested
in learning to play the worship songs that are currently on the top of the
Christian Contemporary charts. Teaching
these songs would better fill the need of what people are looking to learn and would
also probably result in more views.
However, I don’t want to risk copyright infringement in order to achieve
these things.
This
law feels kind of like the speed limit (one of those laws that hardly anyone
follows. A search on You Tube will
reveal millions of videos in which people are teaching how to perform songs
that they don’t own the copyright of.
However, the existence of these videos does not authenticate the
legality of this practice. In some
cases, the owner of copyrighted material will allow a You Tube video to stay
up, but exercise his/her right to collect on the monetization of that video (as
covered in my previous posts: You
Tube Sync Licensing & You
Tube Sync Licensing part 2). If
you are looking to monetize your instructional videos, this process would
prevent you from collecting on the monetization (the owner of the copyright on
the song would collect) even though you created the instruction. It is unclear whether the many instructional videos
currently uploaded to You Tube are suffering from this monetization issue, going
undetected or just illegal.
After
calling Google and speaking to a customer service representative, I was told to
write an email to their legal department.
For those who are interested, the phone number I used to contact Google
was (650) 253-0000. I got through to a
customer service representative rather easily, but he was not able to directly
answer my question (only refer me elsewhere).
The email address he gave me for the legal department was legal@google.com. I will write an updated post as soon as I
hear back from them.
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