Online appeal sets classical music free.

by John Lister

A group of classical music lovers have successfully appealed for funds 
to release copyright-free versions of symphonies by four famous 
composers. The money will pay for an orchestra to record the music on an 
“all rights basis”.

The project, Musopen, aims to deal with a problem caused by the way 
copyright laws work. Although the actual symphonies written by composers 
in, for example, the 19th century are long out of copyright, there is 
separate protection for every individual performance by an orchestra. 
That means that in most cases, the only recordings currently in the 
public domain are very old performances generally recorded with poor 
quality equipment and plagued with hiss and crackle.

Musopen aims to build a library of copyright free performances, allowing 
site visitors to do legally do everything from burn them to CD to use 
them in movies. In some cases this involves simply persuading copyright 
holders to donate their performances to the project, thus opening them 
up to the public domain.

more...
http://tech.blorge.com/Structure:%20/2010/09/06/online-appeal-sets-classical-music-free/
 

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