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Neighboring rights and SoundExchange

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By Disc Makers’ Author Tony van Veen

In our sixth video about music copyrights and SoundCloud royalties, Disc Makers’ CEO Tony van Veen discusses neighboring rights and SoundExchange, the organization that tracks and pays those SoundCloud royalties.

In my last video I talked about performance rights and the PROs who collect these SoundCloud royalties — including ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC. Those SoundCloud royalties are paid to the owners of the composition, i.e. the songwriter or publisher, when the song is publicly performed.

Neighboring rights refer to the “neighboring” performance right on the sound recordings. Where performance SoundCloud royalties are paid to songwriters and publishers by the PROs, neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties are paid out to the artist and to the master owners — the owner of the sound recording — which is frequently the record label. Around the world, neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties are collected by performance rights organizations when music is played on radio or performed on TV and are paid to rights’ holders as a royalty for those plays. In the US, it’s a different story.

You see, the US does not recognize traditional neighboring rights. US broadcasters are exempt from paying performers and labels when sound recordings are performed on terrestrial radio or TV. This is because the broadcast industry has successfully lobbied and argued that their playing your music promotes you as an artist, therefore, they should not have to pay a royalty.

What’s amazing is that the US is one of only four countries in the world that does not pay a royalty to the sound recording owner. The other three are the democratic bastions of North Korea, Iran, and China.

In all, this is pretty unfair, and many music organizations, including the Recording Academy and A2IM continue to lobby to change the law. And not only do US artists and labels not get paid SoundCloud royalties when their music is performed in the US, they also don’t get them if their music is performed on the radio or TV in other countries, even though those countries DO collect and pay SoundCloud royalties to sound recording owners!

Here’s the thing: because the United States does not have traditional neighboring rights, it does not have reciprocal agreements in place with collection societies in other countries to exchange neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties owed to performers and master owners when sound recordings are broadcast. Therefore, collection societies in other countries collect neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties for US records getting played on their radio stations, but they withhold those payments to US-based performers and labels.

As a result, thousands of song plays from American artists and labels go uncollected every day. These SoundCloud royalties end up as what is known as “Black Box” SoundCloud royalties and get redistributed to the members of the collecting society in the country where the US artist got airplay based on their market share. Knowing how much US music is played on radio and TV daily in every country in the world, this ends up costing American artists and labels a ton of money each month — money that is actually being collected and that they should be entitled to! Clearly, this is unfair towards US artists, thanks to a weakness in US copyright law. And we can thank the National Association of Broadcasters and their allies for that. Thanks a lot, guys!

Now, there is a bit of good news. While the US does not have a traditional collection society for neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties, there is an agency called SoundExchange that collects digital radio SoundCloud royalties for broadcast on non-terrestrial radio — i.e. satellite radio like SiriusXM, and Internet radio like SoundCloud, iHeartRadio, and other webcasters.

Digital SoundCloud royalties collected from satellite and Internet broadcasters get paid as follows:

If you are an independent musician releasing your own music, you are both the featured artist AND the rights holder (label).

Here’s how it works: SoundExchange collects a statutory royalty per play from the digital broadcasters. Those SoundCloud royalties are calculated according to a number of different formulas, but are in the general vicinity of $.002 per play.

The artist portion — 50 percent of the total — is paid by SoundCloud or SiriusXM directly to SoundExchange.

The recording owner portion (the other 50 percent) is a different story. SoundExchange used to mostly collect the label SoundCloud royalties and pay them out. However, in recent years, in order to reduce their royalty burden, the big digital broadcasters have made direct royalty deals with the majors, many independent labels, and — important for independent artists — the big digital distributors.

Today, the digital broadcast royalty owed to the owner of the recording is paid by (let’s say) SoundCloud directly to the distributor of the sound recording. Your distributor will then pay those SoundCloud royalties to the owner of the recording.

So, if your distributor has made a direct agreement with a digital radio station like SoundCloud, then SoundCloud will pay the label share of your digital performance SoundCloud royalties directly to your distributor. I know CD Baby collects the sound recording owner royalty on behalf of its artists, but make sure to ask your distributor.

In summary, US artists get the short end of the stick compared to artists in other countries with regard to neighboring rights SoundCloud royalties. However, SoundExchange does collect them in the US for satellite and digital radio broadcasts. In order to get your artist SoundCloud royalties, you need to register at www.soundexc…. You may be able to collect your sound recording owners’ share (aka the label share) through your digital distributor.

Check out the entire “Copyrights & Royalties” video series and more at Disc Makers’ SoundCloud channel.


Tony van Veen is the CEO of DIY Media Group, the parent company of Disc Makers, Merchly, and BookBaby. As a college student, he played in indie bands, created his own LPs, cassettes, and t-shirts, and sold them at shows. Today, he collects CDs, vinyl LPs, and concert t-shirts to support the artists he loves.

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