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ABA Forum: The Legal Implications of DIY Music in a MySpace World - Full Session
Gary A. Watson | Michael Guido | Robert Windham | Stanley H. Schneider | Terry McBride
Terry McBride is co-founder and CEO of Nettwerk Productions, the largest independent record label in Canada. Since its inception in 1984, McBride has grown Nettwerk into a diversified artist services empire, encompassing Nettwerk Records (a record label), Nettwerk Management (an artist management firm), Nettwerk Music Publishing, Nettmedia (a web and digital media enterprise), and Artwerks (a graphic arts and fashion design house). To date, Nettwerk releases have sold more than 100 million copies worldwide. McBride was also one of the creators of the Lilith Fair, a pioneering all-female performer concert tour that enjoyed great success for several years in the late 1990s. |
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Description: In this clip from the 2007 American Bar Association Forum on the Entertainment and Sports Industries, moderator Terry McBride (Nettwerk Records) and attorneys Gary A. Watson, Michael Guido, Robert Windham, and Stanley H. Schneider discuss the effect of new digital music distribution technologies and enterprises on the music marketplace, and the state of the copyright laws which regulate this market. Among the topics discussed are: what the RIAA is really doing by suing its customers who illegally download music; whether unit sales are still the best way to measure success in today’s music industry – and if not, what is; the legal implications of the new 360 deals being signed by artists like Madonna; how online music services like The Orchard and SNOCAP attempt to address the new realities of music sales in the digital age; some possible ways to ensure that all parties still get their fair share in a digital distribution model; whether digital rights management works; and what the future might hold for artists, publishers, record labels, and retailers in the new digital marketplace.
Shoot Date: October 2007 |
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