Thanks David,

This was very helpful.


On Friday, 21 March 2014 at 14:21, David van Ooijen wrote:

> Find below my standard answer. Dates/period adapted to specific video,
> and I think 1922 should be adapted by now. I think key words are Public
> Dmain, original score/publication/own arrangement. Usually the
> copyright notice is taken away within hours. Anyway, even if the
> copyright issue remains, your video will stay online.
> This is music in the public domain. Originally it appeared in a 17th
> century manuscript. I play from the original score/I made my own
> arrangement of the original score.
> "Music and lyrics published in 1922 or earlier are in the Public Domain
> in the United States. No one can claim ownership of a song in the
> public domain. Public Domain music and songs may be used by anyone . .
> . without permission, without royalties, and without any limitations
> whatsoever."
> David
> 
> *******************************
> David van Ooijen
> [1][email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
> [2]www.davidvanooijen.nl (http://www.davidvanooijen.nl)
> *******************************
> On 21 March 2014 14:13, Duncan Midwinter
> <[3][email protected] (mailto:[email protected])> 
> wrote:
> 
> Can anyone give me some advice on how to proceed with my YouTube
> video?
> I uploaded a video of myself playing Dowland's `A Fancy' on the
> guitar to YouTube and my video is marked with a copyright notice:
> "Fantasia "a Fancy", musical composition administered by: One or
> more music publishing rights collecting societies
> What can I do? Surely Dowland is all out of copyright!
> Duncan.
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> 
> References
> 
> 1. mailto:[email protected]
> 2. http://www.davidvanooijen.nl/
> 3. mailto:[email protected]
> 4. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html




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