Cost of playing recorded music to increase

General copyright-related issues and discussions

Moderator: Copyright Reviewers

Post Reply
aldona
active poster
Posts: 385
Joined: Mon Apr 16, 2007 11:09 pm
notabot: 42
notabot2: Human
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Cost of playing recorded music to increase

Post by aldona »

In Australian news just in today...the cost of licence fees for playing background music in restaurants, clubs, gyms and other venues is about to increase sharply, in some cases by 2000-fold.

http://www.theage.com.au/national/ill-h ... -c6sy.html
Cafe and restaurant patrons could soon be eating in silence, after a proposal by Australia's largest record labels to increase the cost of background music by up to 2000 times.
Buoyed by the nightclub ruling, the PPCA is now targeting eateries. It wants to increase licensing fees in a 120-seat restaurant to $19,344 a year — up from $125. Small cafes would be slugged with a 4729 per cent yearly increase from $124 to $5860.
"The multinational record companies are obviously trying to reposition the cost of music, but they don't understand the economics of the businesses they're targeting," Mr Healey said. "Businesses just won't play music or they will play music that won't incur a PPCA fee like classical music."
Hmm...more restaurants and clubs playing classical music, maybe more likely to hire live musicians than filling the place full of ear-splitting noise pollution at top volume...

I say "bring it on"!

Aldona
“all great composers wrote music that could be described as ‘heavenly’; but others have to take you there. In Schubert’s music you hear the very first notes, and you know that you’re there already.” - Steven Isserlis
Yagan Kiely
Site Admin
Posts: 1139
Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2007 8:16 am
notabot: YES
notabot2: Bot
Location: Perth, Australia
Contact:

Re: Cost of playing recorded music to increase

Post by Yagan Kiely »

It's hard to believe how dumb the record labels are. And governments around the world are forgetting why the Statue of Anne was put in in the first place. Now, copyright law is designed to give 'the monopolisers' as much money and take it from the Artist.

Live original music and classical music (and jazz?) will be quite prevalent.
maybe more likely to hire live musicians than filling the place full of ear-splitting noise pollution at top volume...
Pubs that I've walked past don't seem to see a difference. All the live bands are louder that anythign I've heard...

Also, does this effect APRA and the radio?
Post Reply