Pilgrim
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,719
- Location
- Fort Collins, CO
I really wish I had a good way to take on a project and not get sued. Here's the situation:
My daughter's boyfriend just passed along to us a couple of large tubs of 78 recordings. I'm not clear on which decades they span, but there are at least a 200 of them. In addition, I have another 100+ 78s which I inherited from my grandfather, some of which may go back to the 'teens, but most of which are 20's and 30's. Included among them is a record I remember listening to called "Floyd Collins' Fate". Collins was a famous cave explorer who was trapped in a cave in KY in 1925 and died after about two weeks while national media covered the rescue attempts.
Now, I know (based on reports and articles I've read) that only about 20% of the music ever recorded is still available "in print". The rest of the music either isn't commercial feasible to reproduce, or the trail of ownership is so lost in the mists of time that either it can't be traced or it's not commercial practical to do so.
BUT - I would love to take this whole collection, transfer it to digital, and create a website where people could come, surf the recordings and download their choices for maybe 25 cents each. It would provide a service to those who love old recordings, and perhaps generate enough money to make it worth my while.
The problem is the same one everyone has - rights to copy and distribute the music. I don't have them, and most of the recordings probably have owners that either don't realize they own the rights, or who can't be found.
I've thought about talking with a copyright attorney and asking whether I could go ahead with the plan and simply keep records of sales of each recording, and put a public notice on the site that if the owner of any recording contacts me, I will gladly share - or even pass along in entirety - the monies generated by the sale of any recording they can prove they own.
On a practical basis, this seems to me to offer the owner of such a property the prospect of generating income from a property which otherwise would generate nothing. However, operating without prior approval of the owner is probably not a good idea. Practical and legal are not syonymous.
Sadly, I suspect this is not a legally defensible position. But if it were, just think of the doors that one could open on the world of old 78s.
My daughter's boyfriend just passed along to us a couple of large tubs of 78 recordings. I'm not clear on which decades they span, but there are at least a 200 of them. In addition, I have another 100+ 78s which I inherited from my grandfather, some of which may go back to the 'teens, but most of which are 20's and 30's. Included among them is a record I remember listening to called "Floyd Collins' Fate". Collins was a famous cave explorer who was trapped in a cave in KY in 1925 and died after about two weeks while national media covered the rescue attempts.
Now, I know (based on reports and articles I've read) that only about 20% of the music ever recorded is still available "in print". The rest of the music either isn't commercial feasible to reproduce, or the trail of ownership is so lost in the mists of time that either it can't be traced or it's not commercial practical to do so.
BUT - I would love to take this whole collection, transfer it to digital, and create a website where people could come, surf the recordings and download their choices for maybe 25 cents each. It would provide a service to those who love old recordings, and perhaps generate enough money to make it worth my while.
The problem is the same one everyone has - rights to copy and distribute the music. I don't have them, and most of the recordings probably have owners that either don't realize they own the rights, or who can't be found.
I've thought about talking with a copyright attorney and asking whether I could go ahead with the plan and simply keep records of sales of each recording, and put a public notice on the site that if the owner of any recording contacts me, I will gladly share - or even pass along in entirety - the monies generated by the sale of any recording they can prove they own.
On a practical basis, this seems to me to offer the owner of such a property the prospect of generating income from a property which otherwise would generate nothing. However, operating without prior approval of the owner is probably not a good idea. Practical and legal are not syonymous.
Sadly, I suspect this is not a legally defensible position. But if it were, just think of the doors that one could open on the world of old 78s.