Four Industry Experts Explain What’s Wrong With Current Copyright Laws
What are the problems and how can we fix them?
Is there anything more American than deferring to a broken legal system for justice? In the arts, as in daily life, outdated and unbending laws are expected to govern wide scopes of our ever-changing experiences. In music, it’s long been hip-hop that has butted up against the law; the genre’s creative use of sampling became a source of never-ending litigation early on, eventually encouraging more producers to turn away from sampling and towards original composition.
More recently, though, the broader shortcomings of existing copyright laws have been magnified. The fallout from the landmark Marvin Gaye vs. Robin Thicke and Pharrell case, in which Gaye's estate was awarded a victory because Thicke's "Blurred Lines" emulated the style of "Got To Give It Up," highlighted the issue to the average music fan, leaving many of us scratching our heads. How do you quantify vibes and musical textures? The decision gave many people pause and, months later, we're still wondering how, and whether, the laws will ever catch up to the times.
Copyright is a dense subject and it can be difficult to wade through the legalese, so FADER asked four industry experts—each occupying a different position, perspective, and vested interest—to explain copyright laws as they pertain to music in 2015. Here, in laymen's terms, they explain what’s wrong with the system, and how to change it.
1. The Producer
Jeff Peretz, Musician/Producer/Professor at NYU's Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music
2. The Publishing Executive
Justin Kalifowitz, CEO of Downtown Music Publishing
3. The Media Activist
Kembrew McLeod, Author/Filmmaker/Professor at the University of Iowa
4. The Lawyer
Peter DiCola, Professor at Northwestern University School of Law