But the song was used on TV movies and commercials so I wonder how much he made from its use overall
But the song was used on TV movies and commercials so I wonder how much he made from its use overall
mixed emotions considering all the music we bag off BGOL and other "secret" sites. Those artists aren't getting a dime from that, let alone $2700
synchronization and licensing, thats different royalties -But the song was used on TV movies and commercials so I wonder how much he made from its use overall
Dont u mean an inheritance tax?You would think it would be that easy but the streaming services send publishers and writers what is know as a complusory license. A compulsory license allows people to use your music without your permission as long as they send you royalty payments. Some people do the right thing and send quarterly royalty statements and checks but others hope you don't notice and hide under the radar and hoard your money. The only way to be sure they are paying you is to audit them and in most cases it may not be worth it based on how much money is owed. This is what Prince was fighting about. That's why he was so hard on YouTube and streaming sites to keep his music off their services unless he got paid royalties. The music business is corrupt as hell but the IRS is the worst of them all. Google the death tax. They tax you when you die on money you already paid taxes on when you were alive to earn it. They demand that your heirs submit a list of all money's and assets to them so they can get there cut before the can inherit anything. It's legal robbery and they have the nerve to inflict a deadline for it with penalties. Meanwhile if you or I steal from someone it's a felony.
copyright holders can and have in the past denied or yanked music from radio stationsRecord labels had no say in the matter. Because Pandora listeners can only create "stations" around specific artists or music genres, which they personally select, they can't technically access specific songs or albums. That means Pandora is categorized as any other radio station would be. In addition, it goes in accordance with the U.S. law which states that it can play any song by any artist from any label, as long as it pays the legally mandated copyright royalties.
Pandora is licensed through government statute in the U.S. and as a result, record companies cannot withhold from webmaster radio services.
^^ This.Pandora is licensed through government statute in the U.S. and as a result, record companies cannot withhold from webmaster radio services.


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Wow, unbelievable.and niggaz wonder why Gucci Mane will never sign to a major label.
dude can move 100k units and make as much as a nigga on a major label that went platinum.


... While Gucci would've made $78k. 
No it's the death tax. Here's a link explaining it. https://www.fool.com/retirement/2017/02/03/what-is-a-death-tax-and-will-you-have-to-pay-one.aspxDont u mean an inheritance tax?
^^ This.
Pandora pays $0.17 cents per streamed song in royalties.
But Pandora doesn't actually pay artists (directly).
It pays SoundExchange, which then gives artists 45% of net royalties.
Half of net royalties goes to labels, and a portion may find its way back to artists through its royalty accounting system.
EDIT: How SoundExchange distributes net royalties:....
So Pharrell must have had ALOT of 'middle men' involved with this track.
- 50% to the owner of the sound recording...
- 45% to the performing artist and...
- 5% to the session musicians and backup singers.
- Net royalties are royalties less SoundExchange's administration fee, which is 5.3%
The track was released back in 2013, through Back Lot Music >> via Columbia Records >> a subdivision of Sony.
Safe to say all those entities are probably ALL 'getting a cut' of those streams.
(plus his 'Talent Agent' probably gets a cut too)
46 million streams x $0.17 cents = 7.82 million cents = $78,200 dollars
$2,700 is only 3.45% of $78,200Wow, unbelievable.
^^ SO True!!
Pharrell only made $2,700 from Pandora... While Gucci would've made $78k.
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pandora is on the way up outta here(dying) and the streaming companies that are learning to do better by artists are gonna thrive...
thats y i keep my eye on tidal and apple.