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Musician's Guide To Band Agreements |
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Monday, 25 February 2008 |
If you write songs within a band, you need to plan
for the day when you will be earning royalties from your songs, and be
clear what will happen if a member of the band leaves or if the band
splits up. The best way to deal with this is to all agree what is fair,
and then put this in writing as a formal agreement which you all sign.
This way there is little chance of any comeback if the band splits for
less than amicable reasons.
Here are a few specific points you should consider:
- If a member of the band leaves, do they forfeit all rights to the songs, and the songs remain the sole property of the band?
- Are the songs written by one person, or a few principal writers, who wish to retain all rights?
- If a band member leaves would both he and the band both retain a claim to the song, (this is probably the most likely option).
- How do you determine each persons share?
Do you base it on a song by song basis ranking each members input, or use the same formula for every song.
Do
you simply divide everything up equally, (i.e. 5 members each own 20%
of all the songs and therefore receives 20% of the proceeds/royalties),
or do you rank each individuals input?
- If a member leaves, can he/she perform or profit from the music outside of the band.
Sample band contracts can be viewed and downloaded from the following sites:
http://undercurrents.com/agreements/agreement-bandmember.html,
http://www.blues101.org/articles/promotion1.htm and
http://www.musicianassist.com/archive/contract/files/member.htm
The advice from the UK Copyright Service on this subject is:
“Where music is written as a group effort, we recommend that you draw
up an agreement to clarify issues, such as which rights belong to which
member, and how royalties would be distributed in the event that
members of your group leave.
For successful commercial bands, incorporation is also an option. As
with a normal incorporated company, the band members would own shares
in the band/company. In this situation, a band member would typically
sell his shares to the other members if he decided to leave.”
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