For many musicians, the dedication and commitment required for rehearsal and performance leaves little time for managing legal issues. That’s where First4Lawyers can help.
In music, anything unique that you physically create is your intellectual property. If someone has used your work without your permission, you can take action.
For many musicians, the dedication and commitment required for rehearsal and performance leaves little time for managing legal issues. That’s where First4Lawyers can help.
Law problems can crop up frequently along the course of a musician’s career, and when they do it is important that you seek advice from an experienced professional who can help fight for you.
After all, music is many people’s livelihood. UK music licensing body PRS For Music paid music creators over half a billion pounds in 2016, making sure it's members got royalties for broadcasts, digital service plays and music sales.
In music, anything unique that you physically create is your intellectual property.
For example, a song that you have written and recorded is intellectual property owned by you. However, a song idea in your head that has not been written and recorded yet is not your intellectual property.
Government legislation in the UK states that you can buy the intellectual property rights to a piece of music from someone else, and you can choose to sell the rights to the music you physically create.
Intellectual property can have more than one owner, can be sold and transferred, and can belong to businesses as well as people.
Your written music and sound recordings are automatically protected by copyright – you don’t have to apply for copyright or pay for it. You can mark your work with the © symbol and the name and year of its creation, but it’s not a requirement.
The law covers a broad range of intellectual property offences relating to music. Copyright protects your work against:
Copyright on a piece of music lasts for 70 years after it is first published, and international agreements such as the Berne Convention protect your music against copyright infringement in other countries.
Other intellectual property infringements include passing off, which occurs if someone misrepresented your music as being someone else’s music.
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In the event that someone has infringed your intellectual property rights by selling, copying, distributing, performing or using your music without your permission, you have a number of options available to you.
You could attempt to come to an agreement with the offending individual, by contacting them and asking them to stop. However, be aware that you could be sued if you make unjustified threats to a person regarding copyright infringement.
If the individual, group or business that is infringing your copyright refuses to stop, you could opt to try and make a deal, where they pay you for the right to use your material.
If reaching an arrangement or a deal isn’t possible, then you can opt to take legal action against them. In this circumstance, you would need to file legal proceedings through the Intellectual Property Office (IPO) or through the courts.
The courts will expect you to have exhausted all other possible means of resolution before taking legal action.
Most copyright cases involve claims for less than £10,000, and these claims will go through the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court (IPEC) small claims track. However, depending on your circumstances, you may have a claim that need to be handled in a different manner, through a different court.
Whether or not you choose to take legal action, we can advise you on the options open to you.
We can work for the best possible resolution of your case, offer you representation if your intellectual property case goes to court and our solicitors can advise you if you seek to reach a deal or agreement.
Contact us today to discuss the intellectual property rights that apply to your music.