Khachaturian
Moderator: Copyright Reviewers
Khachaturian
Khachaturian died in 1978 and his piano concerto was written c.1936 and published a year later (unless I'm mistaken). Because of the crazy Russian/Armenian copyright laws in relation to Canada and the US, what works including this piano concerto would be in PD?
I would elect no, because if that is in the public domain, then Shostakovich's 5th would be too (which was written around the same time, and Shostakovich died around the same time too), but very unfortunately it is not. However, my reservation is that there may be some interesting renewal issues as Carolus pointed out in the other thread, and so maybe it is public domain in the US? It is not public domain for sure in Canada.
-
- forum adept
- Posts: 97
- Joined: Sun Dec 31, 2006 5:51 am
- notabot: YES
- notabot2: Bot
- Location: Tulsa, OK, USA
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 2249
- Joined: Sun Dec 10, 2006 11:18 pm
- notabot: 42
- notabot2: Human
- Contact:
It will go PD at different times in different countries. As things stand now, it would enter the public domain on Jan. 1, 2029 in Canada, Japan, China, South Korea and the other life-plus-50 countries, which is the soonest apart from a few oddball countries where the term might be less. It will be protected until Jan. 1, 2079 in Mexico! (Life plus 100).