BLK Music is the platform for reclaiming stolen culture. Blockchain copyright tokenization — powered by the Culture Property Rights Standard (CPRS) and anchored on the MADECX Public Ledger. Register masters, compositions, and publishing rights as on-chain tokens that cannot be stolen, diluted, or disputed.
Tokenize your rights on the MADECX Public Ledger under the Culture Property Rights Standard. Immutable proof of ownership for record labels, artists, agencies, and media companies. The industry is shady.
The following artist cases and industry statistics are drawn from court records, biographies, congressional testimony, and peer-reviewed scholarship. All claims are cited. This is not history — the mechanisms enabling this theft remain operational today.
"Hound Dog" (1952) reached #1 on the R&B charts for seven consecutive weeks. Thornton received a reported one-time flat fee with no ongoing royalty participation. Elvis Presley's 1956 cover of the composition by Leiber & Stoller sold over 10 million copies. All publishing royalties flowed through Leiber & Stoller and RCA Records for decades. Thornton received nothing from subsequent exploitation of the work she performed and made commercially viable.
"Maybellene" (1955) was fraudulently credited to Leonard Chess and DJ Alan Freed as co-writers without any creative contribution from either party. This practice — known as "credit washing" — diverted approximately one-third of publishing royalties away from Berry for the full initial copyright term. Berry eventually reclaimed his rights through litigation after the termination window opened. The case established a documented pattern of theft through false copyright registration.
Signed to Specialty Records at $0.005 per record sold — below the then-statutory mechanical rate. Signed away all publishing rights as a condition of the contract. "Tutti Frutti," "Long Tall Sally," "Good Golly Miss Molly," and "Lucille" generated hundreds of millions in licensing revenue over 60 years. Richard testified publicly on multiple occasions that he received under $10,000 total in his first decade with Specialty despite chart-topping commercial success.
Johnson's 29 recordings for Vocalion Records were acquired by Columbia Records through a corporate succession chain. The 1961 Columbia LP King of the Delta Blues Singers introduced his work to millions. Subsequent reissues and compilations generated substantial catalog revenue. Johnson's descendants — whose identity itself was legally contested — received no royalties for over four decades. The estate disputes underscore how failures to document copyright ownership compound through generations.
Widely documented as a primary originator of the electric guitar technique that became rock 'n' roll, Tharpe signed standard "race music" contracts with Decca Records that transferred all publishing rights to the label for a flat session fee. Her recordings were licensed and reissued for decades. She died in 1973 with medical debt despite her foundational influence on commercially lucrative artists who built careers on her innovations. Her posthumous induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2018 came 45 years after her death in poverty.
Signed with Imperial Records under contractual terms that assigned full publishing rights for all compositions to the label as a condition of signing. "Blueberry Hill," "Ain't That a Shame," "I'm Walkin'," and 35 additional top-10 hits generated enormous licensing revenue across multiple decades. Domino received performance royalties only — no publishing participation. Imperial's Lew Chudd retained the publishing catalog until sale to Liberty Records in 1963, at which point the catalog value far exceeded all compensation Domino had received.
Cooke was among the first Black artists to establish his own record label (SAR Records) and publishing company, recognizing the extraction patterns of the era. Despite these efforts, after his death in 1964, control of his publishing catalog and master recordings became the subject of prolonged legal disputes among his estate, manager Allen Klein's ABKCO, and RCA Records. Klein's company acquired significant portions of Cooke's catalog through contracts that Cooke's heirs challenged as exploitative. The estate spent decades in litigation attempting to recover rights to works including "A Change Is Gonna Come," "You Send Me," and "Wonderful World."
McKinley Morganfield (Muddy Waters) signed with Chess Records in 1947 under terms that assigned all publishing rights to Arc Music, a publishing company controlled by Chess brothers Leonard and Phil. "Hoochie Coochie Man," "Mannish Boy," "Got My Mojo Working," and dozens of other compositions became foundational blues standards covered extensively by British Invasion artists. The Rolling Stones took their name from a Waters song. Waters received no publishing royalties from these covers for decades. He did not gain any publishing ownership until his final recording contract with Blue Sky Records in the mid-1970s.
Chester Burnett (Howlin' Wolf) recorded for Chess Records from 1951 until his death in 1976. His compositions — including "Smokestack Lightnin'," "Killing Floor," and "Spoonful" — were assigned to Arc Music, the same Chess-controlled publishing arm that administered Muddy Waters' catalog. Led Zeppelin's use of "Killing Floor" as the basis for "The Lemon Song" resulted in a settlement and belated co-writing credit, but the underlying publishing ownership remained with Arc Music. Wolf's estate received minimal compensation from decades of licensing and cover versions that generated substantial revenue for the publishing rights holders.
Shakur's recording contracts with Interscope and Death Row Records gave the labels ownership of his master recordings. After his death in 1996, Death Row and subsequently its successor entities released numerous posthumous albums from unreleased recordings. Shakur's estate had limited control over the release schedule, quality, and commercial exploitation of these works. The case illustrates how standard major-label recording contracts that assign master ownership to the label create indefinite revenue streams that bypass artist estates entirely, particularly when the artist dies during the contract term.
Charles' early Atlantic Records recordings (1952–1959), including "I Got a Woman," "What'd I Say," and "Hallelujah I Love Her So," were recorded under terms that gave Atlantic full master ownership. When Charles negotiated his landmark deal with ABC-Paramount in 1959 — one of the first contracts granting a Black artist master ownership — it applied only to future recordings. The Atlantic catalog, which defined the soul genre, remained Atlantic property. Those masters generated licensing and compilation revenue for decades without participation by Charles or his estate in the master recording royalties, though he retained publishing on many compositions.
TLC sold over 65 million albums worldwide, making them among the best-selling girl groups in history. Despite this commercial success, the group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1995 while under contract with LaFace Records. Their recording contract allocated the majority of revenue to the label, producers, and management, leaving the three members with per-album advances that, after recoupment of recording costs, marketing expenses, and producer fees, resulted in minimal net income. The case became a public example of how recoupment accounting in major-label contracts can leave commercially successful artists in financial distress.
Parker's bebop compositions — including "Ornithology," "Confirmation," "Yardbird Suite," and "Ko-Ko" — were recorded under flat-fee session contracts that paid musicians per session with no ongoing royalty participation. Publishing rights were retained by the labels or assigned to third-party publishers. Parker died in 1955 at age 34 with virtually no financial assets despite having created a body of work that defined an entire genre. His compositions have been performed, recorded, and licensed continuously for seven decades. The mechanical and performance royalties generated by these works flowed entirely to publishers and labels that acquired the rights for minimal upfront cost.
Braxton's debut album sold over 10 million copies, yet she reported earning only $1,972 from that record after recoupment deductions. She filed for bankruptcy in 1998 and again in 2010 despite cumulative album sales exceeding 67 million units. Her contract with LaFace/Arista allocated approximately $0.35 per album sold to the artist after the label recouped recording costs, advances, promotional spending, and producer royalties. The disparity between commercial success and artist compensation became one of the most widely cited examples of structural inequity in major-label recording contracts during the late 1990s.
The Isley Brothers' early hits with Motown, including "This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak for You)," were recorded under Motown's standard contract that assigned all master and publishing rights to Motown's Jobete Music and affiliated entities. The group founded their own label, T-Neck Records, in 1969 specifically to retain ownership — one of the earliest Black artist-owned labels in R&B. However, their pre-1969 Motown catalog remained Motown property. When Universal Music Group acquired the Motown catalog, it included the Isleys' early masters and compositions, generating ongoing revenue from a catalog the artists had no ownership stake in.
Dixon wrote some of the most commercially valuable blues compositions of the 20th century — "Hoochie Coochie Man," "I Just Want to Make Love to You," "Back Door Man," "Little Red Rooster," "Spoonful," "You Need Love," and "I Can't Quit You Baby." These compositions were assigned to Arc Music, the Chess-controlled publishing entity. When British rock bands — including the Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Cream, and The Doors — recorded versions of Dixon's compositions, the publishing royalties flowed to Arc Music rather than to Dixon. He spent the final decades of his life in litigation attempting to reclaim his publishing rights, eventually reaching settlements in several cases. His advocacy led directly to increased awareness of publishing theft in the blues community.
All claims made on this platform are sourced to peer-reviewed scholarship, court records, government reports, and primary source materials. The following bibliography follows Chicago Author-Date citation format. Citations are organized by category and cross-referenced to platform claims.
A searchable database of precedent-setting cases in copyright enforcement, termination of transfers, sampling clearance, and contract disputes. Every case is directly applicable to claims recovery and enforcement strategy for Black artists and their estates.
Unauthorized sampling of a copyrighted sound recording constitutes copyright infringement. The court held that Biz Markie's use of a three-note sample from Gilbert O'Sullivan's "Alone Again (Naturally)" without license was willful infringement. The court referred the matter to the U.S. Attorney for criminal prosecution, establishing that sampling was not a protected creative practice but required licensing.
Biz Markie sampled approximately three notes and lyrics from Gilbert O'Sullivan's 1972 hit "Alone Again (Naturally)" for the track "Alone Again" on his 1991 album. Warner Bros. Records released the album despite knowledge of the unlicensed sample. The court granted a preliminary injunction and referred the matter to the U.S. Attorney for potential criminal prosecution for willful copyright infringement under 17 U.S.C. § 506(a).
This case fundamentally altered the hip-hop sampling landscape, requiring all samples to be cleared prior to release. It is cited by entertainment attorneys as the foundational sampling clearance case and established that even minor, unrecognizable samples require a license from both the sound recording owner (SR copyright) and the musical composition owner (PA copyright).
"Get a license or do not sample." The Sixth Circuit held that any unauthorized sampling of a copyrighted sound recording — regardless of how minimal or unrecognizable — constitutes per se copyright infringement of the sound recording. There is no de minimis exception for sound recording samples. The court explicitly stated the bright-line rule: "if you cannot hear it, we cannot say you tasted it, but you still took a piece of the pie."
Defendant used a two-second guitar chord sample from the Funkadelic sound recording "Get Off Your Ass and Jam" (1975), slowing it, looping it, and lowering its pitch for use in a rap composition. The defendant argued the use was de minimis — too small to constitute infringement. The Sixth Circuit rejected this argument and established a bright-line rule for sound recordings.
The Ninth Circuit has not adopted Bridgeport's bright-line rule. In Newton v. Diamond, 388 F.3d 1189 (9th Cir. 2004), the court held that a three-note, six-second flute sample from James Newton was de minimis as to the musical composition (though Newton had not cleared the sound recording separately). Artists in California and Ninth Circuit jurisdictions face different exposure analysis.
Statutory heirs retain their inalienable right to terminate copyright transfers under 17 U.S.C. §203(a) even where the deceased artist's estate plan or trust attempted to divert those rights to a foundation or other entity. The termination right belongs to the statutory heirs identified in the statute — it cannot be overridden by testamentary instruments.
Ray Charles's children — who had been disinherited from his estate in favor of a charitable foundation — nonetheless retained their statutory right under 17 U.S.C. §304(c) to terminate the copyright transfers made by Charles during his lifetime. The Ray Charles Foundation challenged the heirs' termination notices, arguing Charles's estate plan precluded the children from exercising termination rights.
This case confirms that §203 and §304(c) termination rights are truly inalienable. No will, trust, estate plan, or contract can extinguish them. If you are a child or spouse of a recording artist who transferred copyrights before 1978, you may have unexercised termination rights regardless of what the artist's estate plan says. The termination window is time-limited — consult an entertainment attorney immediately if you believe you may qualify.
The court denied UMG's motion to dismiss claims by artists — including John Waite, Greg Kihn, and others — that their §203 termination of original recording contracts also terminated the label's right to distribute those sound recordings digitally. The case proceeded on the theory that digital distribution rights are a separate exploitable right that the termination notice encompasses.
This case is critical for understanding the scope of §203 termination in the digital era. Labels have argued that digital downloads and streaming constitute a "license" rather than a "grant of transfer," placing them outside the scope of §203. Courts have increasingly rejected this argument. If an artist successfully terminates a recording contract, the label loses the right to distribute the work digitally as well as physically.
Copyright infringement can occur through "subconscious copying" — where the infringer does not intentionally copy a work but has access to it and produces a substantially similar work. George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord" (1970) was held to infringe the Chiffons' "He's So Fine" (1963) despite Harrison's credible testimony that the copying was unintentional. Access plus substantial similarity suffices for infringement; intent is not required.
The Chiffons' "He's So Fine" was owned by Bright Tunes Music Corp., not by the Chiffons themselves — illustrating the exact publishing ownership extraction problem that BLK Music exists to prevent. The song that generated decades of litigation revenue did so for a publishing company, not for the Black women who performed it. The song's creators received no portion of the $1.6 million judgment.
Affirmed jury verdict of copyright infringement and $5.4 million in damages finding that Michael Bolton's "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You" infringed the Isley Brothers' "Love Is a Wonderful Thing" (1966). The court applied the totality of circumstances test — evaluating the combination of melody, harmony, rhythm, and lyrics — in affirming that the works were substantially similar under the extrinsic and intrinsic tests.
The Ninth Circuit upheld the jury's finding of "reasonable access" based on the Isley Brothers' song having received radio play in the region where Bolton grew up, even without proof of direct listening. This "reasonable access through widespread dissemination" theory is significant for Black artists whose catalog received radio play and may have been subconsciously copied by commercially successful white artists.
Under 17 U.S.C. §505, attorney's fees are available to prevailing parties in copyright litigation — both plaintiffs and defendants — under the same evenhanded standard. There is no presumption in favor of copyright holders, and district courts have broad discretion to award fees to prevailing defendants as well as plaintiffs.
When an artist or rights holder successfully enforces a copyright and prevails, they may be entitled to recover attorney's fees from the infringer under §505. This dramatically reduces the effective cost of copyright enforcement litigation, making it economically feasible for rights holders without major label backing to enforce their rights. This provision is accessible only to rights holders who have registered their copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office prior to infringement or within three months of first publication.
The blanket licensing system operated by PROs (BMI and ASCAP) — under which users pay a flat fee for unlimited access to the entire PRO repertoire — does not constitute per se illegal price-fixing under the Sherman Antitrust Act. The Court applied the rule of reason rather than per se analysis, finding the blanket license to be a pro-competitive arrangement that reduces transaction costs for both music users and rights holders.
This Supreme Court decision is the legal foundation that makes the PRO system constitutional and enforceable. It confirms that artists who register their compositions with ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC are entitled to participate in the blanket license revenue pools distributed by those organizations. The decision legally obligates broadcasters, streaming services, and music users to pay into PRO royalty pools — creating the streams of performance royalty revenue that unregistered artists miss entirely.
Under 17 U.S.C. §304(c)(6)(A), when a copyright grant is terminated, derivative works prepared under the authority of the terminated grant before termination may continue to be exploited under the original license terms. The derivative works exception allows grantees (labels, publishers) to continue exploiting pre-termination derivative works — such as recordings made before the termination notice takes effect — without infringing the reclaimed copyright.
This decision limits the scope of §304(c) terminations in an important way: while you can reclaim the underlying copyright, pre-existing derivative works (recordings, arrangements, film soundtracks) prepared under the original grant may continue to circulate. The reclaimed right does apply to new exploitations — new licenses, new compilations, new synchronization deals — made after the termination effective date.
Commercial purpose does not presumptively defeat a fair use defense. 2 Live Crew's parody of Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman" was remanded for full fair use analysis, with the Court holding that parody — as a form of commentary on the original — can be transformative enough to constitute fair use even when the infringing work is sold commercially. All four factors of 17 U.S.C. §107 must be weighed, with no single factor determinative.
While Campbell protects certain parodic uses from infringement liability, it does not create a blanket commercial fair use defense. The ruling expressly rejected the idea that commercial use was presumptively unfair. For Black artists whose work has been extensively sampled or copied, defendants invoking "parody" as a fair use defense must prove the use comments on the original — using a work as raw material for a new commercial product without commentary does not qualify.
A contract clause retroactively characterizing a commissioned work as "work made for hire" to defeat the creator's termination rights under §304(c) is unenforceable. The court held that a 1969 retroactive contract amendment by Marvel that reclassified Simon's work as "work for hire" was void as against public policy — the termination right is inalienable and cannot be contractually extinguished even through post-hoc characterization.
Record labels have historically used retroactive "work for hire" clauses in contract amendments to attempt to eliminate artists' §203 termination rights. This case establishes that such attempts are unenforceable. An artist's §203 right cannot be waived, reassigned, or extinguished through any contractual device — including retroactive work-for-hire designations imposed after the original grant.
Following the Bright Tunes liability finding, a constructive trust was imposed on all royalties received by George Harrison from "My Sweet Lord" that were traceable to the infringement of "He's So Fine." The constructive trust remedy extends to all subsequent revenue streams derived from the infringing work — not merely a one-time damages award.
The constructive trust doctrine is a powerful equitable remedy for cases where an infringer has been unjustly enriched by ongoing exploitation of stolen music. Courts may impose a constructive trust requiring the infringer to account for and disgorge all profits derived from the infringing work, including royalties from reissues, compilations, streaming, and sync licenses generated over years or decades.
Without copyright registration you cannot sue for statutory damages. Without PRO registration your performance royalties disappear. Without MLC and SoundExchange registration your digital royalties go unmatched. This guide closes every gap.
Protects the recorded master audio. Required for infringement suits, statutory damages, and streaming sync protection. Register every master immediately after completion.
Protects the composition — melody and lyrics. Separate from the recording. Controls covers, samples, and sync licenses. File this even if you wrote and recorded the song yourself.
Protects original cover artwork. Required for full IP portfolio protection, merchandise licensing, and visual commercial use. Register if the artwork is original.
Reclaim rights signed away before 1978. This right cannot be waived by any contract. File at the Copyright Office 2–10 years before the effective termination date.
File at copyright.gov. Upload deposit audio. Fee: $65. Registration is retroactive to filing date. File within 3 months of publication to preserve statutory damages eligibility.
Separate Performing Arts registration for melody and lyrics. List all co-writers and exact splits. Controls who can cover, sample, or license your song. copyright.gov/registration/performing-arts
Choose one PRO. ASCAP ($50 one-time, writer-owned) or BMI (free). Without this, performance royalties from streaming, radio, TV, and venues are never collected.
themlc.com — Free. Collects digital mechanical royalties from all interactive streaming. Without registration, your royalties join the $424M unmatched pool. Register before your music goes live.
soundexchange.com — Free. Collects digital performance royalties from Pandora, SiriusXM, and internet radio. Register as both Artist AND Rights Owner if you own your masters.
Self-assign free at usisrc.org. One ISRC per master. Without it, streams go unattributed across all DSPs. Required by all distributors.
Every co-writer, producer, and featured artist must sign a written split sheet. Verbal agreements are unenforceable. Use Songspace or a formal legal agreement.
If rights were signed away before 1989, you may reclaim them. File Notice of Termination at copyright.gov/termination-of-transfers. Cannot be waived by any contract.
Writer-owned non-profit cooperative. $50 one-time fee for songwriters. Performance royalties from radio, TV, venues, streaming. Full rate schedule published annually. Founded 1914, desegregated 1940s.
ascap.comFree for songwriters. Founded 1939 to serve artists excluded by ASCAP. Performance royalties from broadcast, streaming, and live venues. Historically more accessible to independent and Black artists.
bmi.comCollects digital audio performance royalties from Pandora, SiriusXM, internet radio, and cable TV music. Pays both sound recording rights owner and featured artists directly. Register both identities. Free.
soundexchange.comCreated by the Music Modernization Act (2018). Collects mechanical royalties from all interactive streaming. Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, YouTube Music. $424M currently unmatched. Free to register.
themlc.comCollects mechanicals from physical sales (CDs, vinyl), digital downloads, and ringtones. Now part of SESAC. Essential if your music is on physical formats or older download platforms.
harryfox.comThird major US PRO. Invite-only. Known for higher per-play rates and aggressive licensing. Owns Harry Fox Agency. Performance royalties from broadcast, streaming, and digital use.
sesac.comThis is the complete protocol. Eight mandatory steps. No shortcuts. Every registration link, every fee, every legal consequence of inaction. Follow this in sequence before any release.
The SR copyright protects the specific recorded performance — the actual audio file, the master. This is the copyright that labels systematically stripped from Black artists through work-for-hire contracts and flat-fee buyouts. Without an SR registration, you cannot sue for statutory damages or attorney's fees when your recording is copied, sampled, or distributed without permission.
Under 17 U.S.C. §412, statutory damages ($750–$150,000 per work) and attorney's fees under §505 are available only if the work is registered before the infringement occurs or within three months of first publication. If you wait, you are limited to actual damages — which are nearly impossible to quantify and rarely justify litigation costs. File immediately after completing your master.
If you do not file Form SR: You cannot access the $750–$150,000 per-work statutory damages range against infringers. You cannot recover attorney's fees. Enforcement becomes economically impossible for most artists. This is the mechanism that made Black artists' rights practically unenforceable for generations.
Navigate to copyright.gov/registration/sound-recordings. Click "Register a Work." Create an eCO (Electronic Copyright Office) account. This account will be your permanent copyright management portal.
In the eCO system, select "Sound Recordings" as the type of work. You may register multiple sound recordings on a single application as a collection if they share the same copyright claimant and were first published simultaneously — this saves significant filing fees for albums.
The copyright claimant is the legal owner of the SR copyright. This should be you, your LLC, or your publishing entity — not a record label or manager. If you signed a recording contract, verify that you have not assigned the SR copyright before listing yourself as claimant. Listing an incorrect claimant invalidates the registration.
The Copyright Office requires a "deposit copy" of the work. For sound recordings, this is a digital audio file (MP3, AIFF, or WAV) of the complete recording. For commercially released works, the deposit may be two complete copies of the "best edition." Upload through the eCO electronic deposit system.
The online filing fee for a single work SR registration is $65. Registering multiple works on a single application costs $85. Check copyright.gov for current fee schedules — fees are periodically adjusted by the Register of Copyrights. copyright.gov/registration/fees
Upon submission, you will receive a case number and service request number. Record this immediately. Registration is retroactive to the date the complete application is received — even before the Copyright Office examines it. The date of receipt is your protection date for purposes of §412 eligibility.
Processing Time: Electronic applications typically take 3–9 months to fully process. However, your registration date is the date of receipt, not the date of final registration. For infringement litigation purposes, this receipt date is what matters.
Upon registration, the Copyright Office issues a Certificate of Registration bearing your registration number (format: SR0000000000) and effective date. Keep this document. It is your evidence in federal court that you own the sound recording copyright and registered it in compliance with 17 U.S.C. §411.
This is the single most misunderstood concept in music copyright. The SR copyright and the PA copyright are entirely separate legal rights. The SR protects the recording. The PA protects the song — the melody and lyrics that could be performed by any artist. You need both. Filing only one means you lose an entire category of infringement claims and royalty streams.
Why this was weaponized against Black artists: Labels routinely had artists sign away PA (publishing) rights as a condition of recording contracts while retaining ownership of the SR. This meant that when white artists covered Black songs — or when those songs were licensed for films and advertisements — all publishing revenue flowed to the label's publishing subsidiary, not to the Black composer. This single mechanism generated billions in uncompensated revenue.
The PA copyright covers: (1) the musical composition — melody, harmony, rhythm as fixed in the sheet music or lead sheet; (2) the lyrics; (3) the arrangement, if sufficiently original; (4) any translated or adapted versions. If anyone covers your song, samples your melody, or uses your lyrics in any form, the PA copyright is what gives you the infringement claim.
List every co-writer on the PA registration with their IPI numbers (assigned by ASCAP or BMI upon membership). The split percentages listed on the PA registration should match the written split sheet executed between all co-writers. Discrepancies between the PA registration and split sheet agreements have been used to invalidate copyright claims in litigation. Get this right at registration.
Select "Performing Arts" as the work type in the eCO system. This covers musical compositions, songs, and lyrics. The process is identical to Form SR except that the deposit is typically a lead sheet, lyrics sheet, or audio recording demonstrating the composition.
The preferred deposit for a PA registration is a notated lead sheet (melody with chord symbols and lyrics). If you do not read music, an audio recording clearly demonstrating the melody and complete lyrics is acceptable as a deposit. The Copyright Office has accepted recordings as deposits for musical compositions since 1978.
After registering your composition with your PRO (Step 3), you will receive an ISWC (International Standard Musical Work Code) from your PRO. This code should then be added to your metadata as the universal identifier for the composition. It cross-links your Copyright Office registration, PRO registration, and MLC registration.
A Performing Rights Organization (PRO) collects public performance royalties whenever your music is performed publicly — on radio, television, in restaurants and bars, at live venues, and through digital streaming services. PROs operate under blanket licenses with music users (legally validated by BMI v. CBS, 441 U.S. 1 (1979)) and distribute collected fees proportionally to registered rights holders.
ASCAP's 26-year exclusion of Black composers (1914–1940s) directly prevented Black artists from accessing this revenue infrastructure during the most formative commercial period of American popular music. Their compositions were performed commercially during those decades with no performing rights compensation to the creators. This is a documented mechanism of generational wealth destruction with a specific legal history.
ascap.com/members/join — $50 one-time membership fee. ASCAP is owned and run by its writer and publisher members — it is the only major U.S. PRO structured as a cooperative. Membership includes voting rights in ASCAP governance. ASCAP publishes its full royalty rate schedule publicly. Best for artists who prioritize transparency and institutional accountability.
bmi.com/creators/register — Free for songwriters. BMI was founded in 1939 in part to serve artists excluded by ASCAP, and historically has been more accessible to independent and Black artists. BMI is a for-profit company but distributes performance royalties at comparable rates to ASCAP. No initial fee for writer membership.
Separate from your writer membership, you should also register a publishing entity with your PRO — even if it is a "self-publishing" entity (your LLC or sole proprietorship). The publishing share of performance royalties (50% of the total performance royalty pool) flows to the publisher. By creating a publishing entity, you capture both the writer's share AND the publisher's share of your compositions.
After joining your PRO, register every composition by: title, co-writers with their IPI numbers, percentage splits, publication date, ISRC (if recorded), and ISWC (assigned by the PRO). Registration must occur before the work is publicly performed to capture royalties from that performance. There is no retroactive collection period for pre-registration performances.
A mechanical royalty is paid for the reproduction of a musical composition — each stream of your song on Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, or YouTube Music triggers a mechanical royalty obligation. The statutory mechanical rate for streaming is established by the Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) and is currently approximately 15.1% of total streaming revenue allocated to songwriters and publishers.
$424 million in unmatched mechanical royalties currently sits in the MLC's account (MLC Annual Report, Q4 2023). This money is owed to songwriters and publishers whose compositions cannot be matched to a registered rights holder. A disproportionate share is legacy catalog from Black artists who never registered with any publishing rights organization. If you have pre-digital catalog on any streaming platform, check whether it is matched at themlc.com.
Go to themlc.com/register. Free for all songwriters, composers, and music publishers. Registration as a "Songwriter" registers you as an individual creator. Registration as a "Publisher" requires a business entity (LLC or sole proprietorship with a distinct DBA name from your legal name).
After registering, upload your complete catalog to the MLC's works database. Include: title, ISWC, ISRC links, co-writer IPI numbers, and publisher information. The MLC uses this data to match streaming reports from DSPs to your compositions and generate royalty payments.
Use the MLC's search tool to check whether your works are currently matched in their system. If you find unmatched works that belong to you, file a claim through the MLC portal. The MLC's Dispute Resolution Process is governed by MMA §115(d)(3)(J). Time-sensitive: the MLC may eventually distribute unmatched funds to matched rights holders after notice periods.
SoundExchange collects digital audio performance royalties under the statutory license in 17 U.S.C. §114 — royalties paid by Pandora, SiriusXM, internet radio services, webcasters, and cable TV music channels. These are distinct from streaming mechanicals (MLC) and from interactive streaming performance royalties (PRO). A separate registration at SoundExchange is the only way to access this revenue stream.
SoundExchange distributes royalties directly to performing artists — 45% of the total royalty goes to the featured artist regardless of who owns the master. The remaining 55% goes to the sound recording rights owner. If you own your master (no label deal, or after §203 termination), you capture both shares.
soundexchange.com/artist-copyright-owner/register — Register separately as a "Featured Artist" to claim the 45% performance royalty. This is paid directly to you regardless of master ownership.
If you own or have reclaimed your master through §203 termination, also register as a "Rights Owner" at SoundExchange to capture the 55% sound recording owner share. Register both identities. Free. $300M+ currently unclaimed annually — act before SoundExchange's 3-year lookback window closes on your earnings.
The International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) is a 12-character alphanumeric code that uniquely identifies a specific master recording across all digital platforms and royalty collection systems globally. Every DSP, PRO, and royalty collection organization uses ISRC as the primary identifier to match streams, downloads, and broadcast plays to specific recordings and their rights holders.
Without an ISRC: Your streams on every platform go unattributed. SoundExchange cannot identify your recording. The MLC cannot match streams to your composition. ISRC is the connective tissue of the entire digital royalty system. Every recording without an ISRC is hemorrhaging royalty revenue.
Register as an ISRC registrant at usisrc.org to self-assign ISRCs to all of your recordings. Alternatively, your distributor (DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby) will assign ISRCs during delivery — but controlling your own ISRC registration is best practice. One ISRC per recording. Never reuse an ISRC for a different recording — it breaks matching across all platforms.
A split sheet is a written agreement executed between all contributors to a musical work (co-writers, producers, featured artists) documenting each party's ownership percentage. Verbal agreements regarding music ownership are nearly impossible to enforce in court and routinely result in expensive litigation that benefits only attorneys.
The moment a song earns money, every uncompensated collaborator becomes a potential litigant. Producers who contributed beats, co-writers who provided hooks, and featured artists who contributed verses have all successfully sued for retroactive ownership claims when no written split sheet was executed before release. Fix the paperwork before the song goes live.
All contributors' shares must add up to 100%. The split sheet should identify: writer's split (composition ownership) and master split (sound recording ownership) separately. These may differ — a producer may own 50% of the master but 33% of the composition.
Each co-writer's PRO Interested Party Information (IPI) number should be included in the split sheet. This ensures royalty matching at ASCAP, BMI, MLC, and SoundExchange is accurate and unambiguous. Use legal names, not stage names, as the binding parties.
Songspace.com provides digital split sheet management with e-signature capability. Alternatively, consult an entertainment attorney for a template appropriate to your jurisdiction. The key legal elements: identification of all parties, percentage splits for both composition and master, date of creation, and signatures from all parties.
Under 17 U.S.C. §203, an author who executed a copyright transfer or exclusive license on or after January 1, 1978 may terminate that grant 35 years after the date of execution, regardless of any agreement to the contrary. Under 17 U.S.C. §304(c), for works with copyrights in their renewal term before 1978, authors or their statutory heirs may terminate grants 56 years after the copyright was originally secured. This right cannot be waived, assigned, or extinguished by any contract clause — it is inalienable by statute.
Confirmed by Ray Charles Foundation v. Robinson, 795 F.3d 1109 (9th Cir. 2015): Statutory heirs retain termination rights even if the artist's estate plan attempted to divert those rights. No will, trust, or estate plan can eliminate a statutory heir's right to terminate. If you are a child or spouse of a recording artist who transferred copyrights before 1978, consult an entertainment attorney immediately about your termination eligibility dates.
For §203 (post-1978 grants): termination is effective between 35 and 40 years after the grant. The Notice of Termination must be served no earlier than 10 years and no later than 2 years before the effective termination date. Miss the window and the right expires permanently. For §304(c) (pre-1978 grants): the calculation is different — consult copyright.gov or an entertainment attorney for the specific dates applicable to your works.
The Notice of Termination must include: identification of the grant being terminated, the date the grant was executed, the effective date of termination, and the identity of the terminating party. It must be served on the grantee (label or publisher) and recorded with the U.S. Copyright Office before the effective termination date. copyright.gov/termination-of-transfers
Per Waite v. UMG Recordings, Inc., 477 F. Supp. 3d 265 (S.D.N.Y. 2020), a successful §203 termination may encompass the label's right to distribute the works digitally — including streaming on Spotify, Apple Music, and other DSPs. Following a successful termination, the label may be required to remove your catalog from streaming platforms. Consult counsel before and after filing.
Time-critical for Black artist estates: Artists who signed recording contracts in the 1970s and 1980s have §203 termination windows open now and closing soon. Artists from the 1950s and 1960s — including many whose heirs have never exercised these rights — have §304(c) claims that may still be viable. copyright.gov/termination-of-transfers
Register and protect your music before a single stream is counted. Every DSP has specific technical, metadata, and legal requirements. Submission failures are rejected without explanation. This is the full specification.
| Specification | Minimum Required | Recommended | Critical Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| File Format | WAV, AIFF | FLAC (lossless) | Never MP3 source files. Distributors transcode for delivery. |
| Sample Rate | 44,100 Hz | 48,000 Hz | Never upsample from a lower rate. Use original session rate. |
| Bit Depth | 16-bit | 24-bit | Apple Music Lossless requires 24-bit. Higher dynamic range. |
| Integrated Loudness | No minimum | –14 LUFS | All major DSPs normalize to –14 LUFS. Louder files are turned down. |
| True Peak Ceiling | –1.0 dBFS | –1.0 dBFS hard ceiling | Exceeding causes clipping during AAC/Ogg codec conversion. |
| Cover Art Size | 3000×3000 px | 4000×4000 px | Square format only. JPEG or PNG. RGB color space — never CMYK. |
| Cover Art Content | Original artwork | No URLs, text, or logos | Apple and Spotify reject art containing website URLs or social handles. |
| ISRC | Required by all DSPs | Self-register at usisrc.org | One ISRC per master. Never reuse for a different recording. |
| UPC Barcode | Required per release | Via distributor or GS1 | One UPC per album or single. Each release needs its own UPC. |
| ℗-Line | Required | ℗ [Year] [Rights Owner] | Sound recording copyright. Must match SoundExchange registration name. |
| ©-Line | Required | © [Year] [Publisher/Writer] | Composition copyright. Must match PRO and MLC registration name exactly. |
| Metadata Title | Match registered copyright | No all-caps or symbols | Inconsistent titles cause royalty matching failures across all systems. |
Your catalog. Your royalties. Your copyright status. Your claims queue. All of it — in one place.
The music business extracts value at every point in the chain. These practices close the gaps that labels, publishers, and distributors exploit — systematically and deliberately.
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Every major label contract grants you the right to audit. Most artists never use it. 50 Cent sued Interscope. TLC filed against LaFace. The Temptations spent decades fighting Motown. This is the process.
50 Cent engaged forensic accountants to audit Interscope's royalty statements across the Get Rich or Die Tryin' and The Massacre cycles. His team alleged systematic undercounting of digital download royalties during the iTunes era — a period when labels routinely categorized digital sales as "licenses" (paying 50% of receipts) rather than "sales" (paying standard 12–18% royalty rate). The difference between those two royalty structures on a 10-million-unit seller is in the millions.
The case settled out of court under confidentiality agreement. Industry attorneys widely cite it as a landmark in digital-era royalty disputes and it accelerated the renegotiation of digital royalty language across major label contracts throughout 2010–2012.
Despite selling 10 million copies of CrazySexyCool — one of the best-selling albums of the 1990s — TLC filed for bankruptcy in 1995. Their royalty rate was approximately $1.75 per album on a contract that required recoupment of advances, production costs, marketing budgets, and tour support against that rate. Forensic analysis of their royalty statements revealed they were in "perpetual debt" to LaFace despite generating hundreds of millions in revenue for the label.
The bankruptcy filing forced a contract renegotiation. Their case directly prompted industry conversation about the exploitative recoupment structure that kept artists broke regardless of commercial success.
Members of the Temptations and their estates pursued Motown for decades over royalty underpayments on one of the most commercially successful catalogs in popular music history. Central disputes included mechanical royalty miscalculations, failure to account for foreign sub-publishing income, and the misclassification of revenue streams that reduced the applicable royalty rate.
The case illustrates the particular vulnerability of pre-1972 recordings — which are governed by state law rather than federal copyright law — and the difficulty of recovering royalties across corporate acquisitions (Motown → MCA → Universal Music Group).
Prince's campaign against Warner Bros. beginning in 1993 was the most public audit and rights dispute in music history. He changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol and wrote "Slave" on his face — acts of protest against a contract that he argued gave Warner Bros. ownership of his masters and creative output in perpetuity while misaccounting for royalties. His forensic team alleged millions in underpaid royalties across the Purple Rain, Around the World in a Day, and Sign 'O' the Times cycles.
After his Warner contract expired in 1996, Prince founded NPG Records and negotiated unprecedented direct distribution arrangements. His estate recovered full master ownership upon his death in 2016, and subsequent forensic accounting revealed Warner had underreported royalties across multiple catalog periods.
Toni Braxton filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 1998 despite selling 25 million albums. Her forensic accounting team documented that her royalty rate of approximately $0.35 per album, combined with broad recoupment provisions covering music video budgets, tour support, and independent promotion expenses, left her with minimal net royalties despite generating over $170 million in revenue for LaFace/Arista. A second bankruptcy in 2010 revealed additional royalty underpayments from digital distribution.
Every recording contract contains an audit clause specifying: (a) the lookback window — typically 2–3 years, sometimes 4 in California; (b) the notice requirements — usually 30–60 days written notice; (c) frequency limits — typically once per calendar year; (d) cost allocation — who pays the auditor if discrepancies are found vs. not found.
Locate the exact clause language. The phrase "examination of books and records" is the key phrase. If your contract predates 1990, the clause may use older language but the right is the same.
You need two specialists: an entertainment attorney experienced in royalty disputes to manage the legal process and interpret contract language; and a forensic CPA or music royalty auditing firm with label audit experience. These are distinct skills — a general CPA cannot read a royalty statement; a forensic music accountant can.
Key firms with documented label audit experience: Gelfand Rennert & Feldman (Los Angeles); Neville Johnson & Associates; Pryor Cashman LLP (New York); Sedgwick LLP. In the UK: BDO LLP has an entertainment audit division.
Expect costs of $15,000–$60,000 for a full forensic audit depending on catalog size and label complexity. Many firms work on contingency if the potential recovery is significant.
Your attorney sends a formal written audit notice to the label's legal department — not to your A&R contact or manager — specifying the period under audit, the identity of the auditor, and the request for access to all relevant books and records. Send via certified mail with return receipt. Keep all copies.
The notice freezes the lookback window. If you wait, the statute of limitations continues to run. Many artists lose years of legitimate claims simply by failing to trigger the audit process in time.
Your forensic CPA should request the following categories of documents for the audit period:
Forensic music accountants document these as the most frequently recurring discrepancies in label royalty statements:
Your forensic CPA produces a written audit report documenting every discrepancy by category, period, and dollar amount. The report should distinguish between: (a) clear mathematical errors; (b) contract interpretation disputes; (c) potential fraud. Each category has a different legal pathway.
The audit report becomes the basis for settlement negotiation. Do not send the report directly to the label — send it to your attorney, who will use it to draft a demand letter.
The vast majority of label audit disputes — including high-profile ones — settle before trial. Labels prefer confidential settlements to public litigation that creates precedent and publicity. Your attorney sends a demand letter citing the audit findings and quantifying the claim. The label's business affairs department responds.
If settlement negotiations fail, the claim proceeds to arbitration (if your contract contains a mandatory arbitration clause, which most do post-1990) or litigation. California courts and New York courts are the primary venues for music royalty litigation given where the major labels are headquartered.
A successful audit creates leverage for renegotiation. Use the settlement to: (a) obtain improved royalty rates going forward; (b) update digital royalty language to current standards; (c) reduce or eliminate exploitative recoupment provisions; (d) negotiate audit rights for future periods on an agreed schedule.
If the label is in material breach, the audit findings may support termination of the contract entirely — freeing you to re-sign with better terms elsewhere or distribute independently.
Established that digital downloads are "licenses" not "sales" under the standard recording contract. Eminem's producers received 50% of net receipts vs. 12–18% royalty rate — the difference on 73 million iTunes downloads was $1.6M. This precedent applies to all artists on pre-2010 contracts. If your label has never renegotiated your digital royalty terms, you may have a claim.
Court held that digital download royalties must be calculated at the license rate, not the sales rate — consistent with F.B.T. Affirmed that labels cannot unilaterally reclassify revenue streams to reduce royalty obligations. The court's analysis of the accounting methodology is the most detailed judicial treatment of music royalty forensics in the digital era.
California: 4 years from breach of written contract. New York: 6 years. The clock begins when the royalty statement was issued — not when you discovered the error. Courts have split on whether the "discovery rule" applies to music royalty cases. File before the window closes.
Separate from royalty audits: if a label has commercially exploited your name, voice, or likeness — in compilations, streaming playlists, sync licenses — without authorization or proper accounting, this statute provides a separate damages claim. Statutory minimum of $750 per violation plus actual damages.
Review your contract audit clause, identify the lookback period, then engage an entertainment attorney and forensic CPA. The process takes 6–18 months. Most labels settle. The money is almost always there.