Ah, that makes more sense. But still, it might be misinterpreted. Many folks in 
the folk music world, including many people who are composing new tunes, feel 
that music should be shared, for free, with anyone. I just don't want that 
popular opinion to be accepted as the only opinion, so the rights of composers 
who feel differently are infringed upon.

I have actual experience with this. I know of one hg player who does extremely 
creative arrangements of public domain tunes, so creative that the original 
tune is barely recognizable. They're great arrangements, and maybe even should 
count as brand new, original tunes. He doesn't call them by their traditional 
names, but comes up with new names for them. Also, he is rather possessive of 
these arrangements, and has explicitly stated that he doesn't want other people 
playing them, even just hobbyists who are making no money off the tunes. I 
think this is because he doesn't want his arrangements being mistaken for the 
genuine, traditional tunes, and misleading people who might think they're 
playing historically accurate music. He'd rather have the original, historical 
tunes stay pure, so each new musician can do their own arrangements of them, 
not an arrangement of an arrangement.

I also know a musician who has taken it upon herself to transcribe tunes and 
post them online. (Not for free, she charges to download each tune.)  She has 
been transcribing all sorts of standards, including, I'm sorry to say, many 
things that are still definitely under copyright, like classic tunes from the 
1950's and '60's. She isn't paying the composers' estates a cent. She also 
often doesn't even credit the composers, but claims that the tunes are 
"traditional," so her customers who buy her tunes, and might later want to 
record and sell them, would be inadvertently committing a crime. I have told 
her that this is wrong, for both legal and ethical reasons, but she has said 
that she plans to keep doing it since she probably won't get caught. (Most of 
the composers lived or live in other countries, so she thinks the danger is 
less.)

After a great deal of argument, I did manage to stop her from selling the very 
creative arrangements done by this hg player I mentioned (which she had been 
claiming were traditional.) I think what finally convinced her was that this hg 
player was someone she might run into, so she was more likely to get caught.

She also expressed interest in transcribing a tune I wrote, but I think I 
managed to convince her not to do that either. Maybe I'd better check her 
website to make sure. Many people have asked me for dots for this tune. I'm 
wondering what to do about sharing it, since it is a good tune if I do say so 
myself, and I'd like to see it become popular. But I don't want someone else 
making this decision for me.

So, I guess I am a composer who feels strongly about this, which I guess 
qualifies me to answer your question.

Melissa
www.melissatheloud.com
My tune in question is The Burning of the Temple, track 3 off my solo CD, Tunes 
From a Strange Land:
http://cdbaby.com/cd/kacalanos

Paul Sherwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Melissa,
I know it wasn't clear from my message but when I said 'how strongly people
feel' I was thinking of the composers feelings, not the general list. Hopefully
there are some composers (or people who know their thoughts) on this list
who might comment.
Paul

On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 6:23 PM, Melissa Kacalanos  wrote:
> How the folks on this list feel about this isn't the issue. What matters is
> how the composers feel about their music being published, and the only way
> to find that out is to ask them.
>
> Let's say there's a musician who composes a good tune, so other musicians
> want to play it. Someone might transcribe it and want to share it, say by
> putting it online, for free, for other hobbyists to play, also for free. Or
> maybe he just hands out sheet music to his friends. No one is making money
> off this. Then what if the original composer later wants to publish a book
> of original tunes? The musicians who want that tune have already downloaded
> that tune for free, so there goes the potential market for that book. Yes,
> no one has made any money off of the composer's tune, but the composer has
> still been cheated.
>
> Under US copyright law at least, this is illegal. More importantly, it's a
> mean thing to do to our fellow musicians.
>
> I'm sure many musicians would be happy to share their music if you ask them,
> but the important thing is asking them.
>
> Melissa
> www.melissatheloud.com
>
>
> Paul Sherwood 
 wrote:
>  I think most people in the trad and folk world are happy to have people
> play their tunes. Whether they are happy to have them published as
> a manuscript (or other forms such as abc) is a different matter. Since
> Blowzabella publish the books as part of their income, they might well
> object to lost revenues if someone made a big ABC file and put it on the
> net.
>
> Any thoughts on how strongly people feel about this?
>
> Paul
>
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 3:33 PM, DEREK LOFTHOUSE wrote:
> > I am at work so i dont have the books here to check, but the 2nd
> Blowzabella
> > tune book says something to the effect of 'please feel free to play our
> > tunes, but credit us and something about royalties if you are making money
> > off of them'.
> > I think most people writing music in the 'trad' world are just happy to
> have
> > their tunes played. I've been to workshops with Gilles Chabenat and he
> > mainly works on his own tunes, so i think he is more than happy to see
> > people play them
> >
> > hope this helps a little
> >
> > derek



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