Coaching

ASCAP Releases Songwriter Bill of Rights

ASCAP officially launched a โ€œBill of Rights for Songwriters and Composersโ€ yesterday (4/17) to remind the public, industry participants, and the guys in Washington about the central roles and rights of those who conceive and create music. The initiative, which revolves around 10 core principles, has been enacted to protect rights already inherent in the act of music creation and U.S. Copyright law in response to recent insecurities about the future of the music business.

ASCAP officially launched a โ€œBill of Rights for Songwriters and Composersโ€ yesterday (4/17) to remind the public, industry participants, and the guys in Washington about the central roles and rights of those who conceive and create music. The initiative, which revolves around 10 core principles, has been enacted to protect rights already inherent in the act of music creation and U.S. Copyright law in response to recent insecurities about the future of the music business.

Included in these โ€œ10-core principlesโ€ are the right to be โ€œcompensated for use of creative works and share in the revenues they generate,โ€ and the right to โ€œlicense works and control the ways in which they are used,โ€ according to ASCAPโ€™s website.

ASCAP President and Chairman Marilyn Bergman, also an Academy Award-winning lyricist, said the organization launched โ€œthis Bill of Rightsโ€ because todayโ€™s industry dynamic has made it โ€œall to easy to overlook the source of it all โ€“ individual songwriters, lyricists and composers.โ€ โ€œOur goal,โ€ she continued, โ€œis to remind lawmakers, the general public and music creators themselves of the rights that are inherent in their art.โ€

In only a few days during ASCAPโ€™s โ€œI Create Music Expoโ€ earlier this month, more than 500 signatures were collected, including those of Lionel Richie, Jackson Brown, Steve Miller, Mike Stoller and others. Over the next few months, ASCAP will continue to collect signatures and support from both established and aspiring songwriters, lyricists and composers from all genres, which will be shared with key legislatures in Washington as well as leaders both inside and out of the music industry. Those interested in adding support to the bill can sign it electronically at ASCAP’s SITE.