Sony Issues The 'Bob Dylan Copyright Collection Volume' Solely To Extend Copyright On Dylan's Work
from the copyright-at-work dept
It's
almost as if the major labels aren't even trying to hide how they like
to abuse the spirit of copyright law in order to keep things locked up
as long as possible. Sony Music recently "issued" (and I use the term
loosely) a special
limited release Bob Dylan collection
and didn't even bother to try to hide the real reason for putting it
out. It's in the name of the damn release: "Bob Dylan: The Copyright
Extension Collection Vol. 1."
Yes, the entire purpose of releasing this is so that Sony Music can keep
Bob Dylan songs under copyright in Europe for a longer period of time.
As they're all too happy to explain, copyright term extension for
recordings happened in Europe recently, bumping it up from 50 years to
70 years -- but there's a "use it or lose it" clause in there:
Two spokesmen for Sony confirmed that the set was legitimate, its
bootleglike appearance notwithstanding. They explained that the point of
the release was to keep the recordings under copyright protection in
Europe, where the laws are in flux. Currently, recordings can be
copyrighted in Europe for 50 years, a much shorter term than in the United States, where recordings made since 1978 will remain copyrighted until 70 years after the death of the last surviving author.
In 2011 the European Union revised its copyright laws
to extend copyright to 70 years. The change is not yet in effect but
will be by 2014. And there’s a catch, a “use it or lose it” provision:
recordings cannot benefit from the 20-year extension unless they were
published before the 50-year term expired. The recordings on “The 50th
Anniversary Collection” were about to fall over that legal precipice.
Of course, since this is all about
protectionism rather than
actually getting people to hear the music, this collection is somewhat
difficult to find (well, unless you go to unauthorized sources for
digital downloads -- not that we recommend such things). That's because
they only made 100 copies of them and gave them to a few stores in key
European countries.
Only about 100 copies of the four-CD set were produced, with sparse packaging and an insert listing the details of the set’s 86 tracks, all previously unreleased studio outtakes and live recordings from 1962 and 1963.
It also comes as a downloadable version, available through the singers’s Web site, bobdylan.com,
but only to fans who log on from France or Germany. (Prices for the CD
set vary from country to country, from the equivalent of $39 to, in
Britain, $138)
American collectors are locked out, although for those desperate to have
an original CD set, several have made their way to eBay, where bids have gone as high as about $1,450.
Anyway, I'm sure all of this activity is creating incentive for Bob Dylan to make more music from 1962.
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