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UK Council of Music Makers’ Urgent Call for Negotiators to Proceed With the Copyright Directive

The Copyright Directive is under immediate threat from lobbying. The UK Council of Music Makers, of which the MU is a member, is urgently calling on negotiators to proceed with the Copyright Directive.

Published: 08 February 2019 | 12:00 AM Updated: 28 April 2021 | 4:29 PM

The Copyright Directive is under immediate threat from lobbying. The UK Council of Music Makers, of which the MU is a member, is urgently calling on negotiators to proceed with the Copyright Directive.

Passing the Copyright Directive is vital in making sure that musicians are paid fairly for their work in today’s online environment. It will mean work published on digital platforms such as YouTube will be paid for in the same way as music used on streaming platforms, radio or TV shows.

Read the full letter below:

An open letter from the UK Council of Music Makers: The REAL creators speak out #notinourname

LONDON - February 8, 2019: The UK Council of Music Makers (CMM) - comprising BASCA, FAC, MMF, MPG and the MU - call on negotiators to proceed with the Copyright Directive.

We are the voice of UK songwriters, music producers, performing artists, musicians and music managers. We speak on behalf of thousands of makers of the music this ‘industry’ represents. We speak with one voice with all the creator-led organisations across Europe and around the world in supporting the Copyright Directive.

While the current text could be improved and still includes some problematic provisions, it is a compromise. At every step of this process the creative community has sought compromise and been open to dialogue.

Most creators and artists in the UK struggle to make a living from music. Without this Directive, creators will be entirely deprived of any means to get a fair remuneration in the online environment: the market will be entirely driven by the commercial interests of free-riding tech giants. This would be a fundamental failure for European policy-making and the functioning of our democracy, as it can only be interpreted as an endorsement of the unfair and manipulative practices of some tech giants that refuse any responsibility.

We make the music that people want to listen to and buy. It is our intellectual property and our rights and we need the Copyright Directive to put in place reasonable and fair safeguards.

It is hugely disappointing to see the music labels and publishers disregard the interests of their creators and artists in this way. They are trying to overturn years of collaborative work at the 11th hour by killing the Copyright Directive. Like YouTube, they have lobbied negotiators hard without consulting or informing the creative community. Heavy-handed tactics of heavyweight businesses.

It is sad to see labels and publishers turn on their creators and artists in this way. They are trying to halt the Directive not only because of the latest wording of Article 13 but because they want to avoid the improvements to transparency and fairness that the Articles 14-16 bring. We are saddened that the short-term commercial interests of these companies can be put before modernisation of copyright legislation that will benefit the whole industry.

The labels and publishers have shown an unsettling disrespect for the talent that they have the privilege of representing, raising serious questions about their suitability to be the custodians of copyright. We have worked in tandem with UK Music and colleagues across the industry to find compromise and solutions that enable legislation to pass. This Directive will affect future generations of creators and performers whose interests need protecting beyond the interests of current models.

We have been engaged and willing to negotiate, and we remain engaged and progressing in good faith, with both tech and industry. We have not given up on this important legislation.

We call on UK Government and UK Music to support the adoption of the Copyright Directive.

Council of Music Makers (UK)

British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA)
Featured Artists Coalition (FAC)
Music Managers Forum (MMF)
Music Producers Guild (MPG)
Musicians’ Union (MU)

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Help make sure that musicians and creators are paid for the work that they do – share the UK Council of Music Makers’ open letter on your social channels and spread the word on the need to act.

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