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Concepts of Music and Copyright - How Music Perceives Itself and How Copyright Perceives Music (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,173
Discovery Miles 31 730
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Concepts of Music and Copyright - How Music Perceives Itself and How Copyright Perceives Music (Hardcover)
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I've long known that musicians understand copyright law as little
as copyright lawyers understand music, but this book shows
brilliantly that such mutual ignorance is deeply rooted in
historical, philosophical and practical arguments about music
making. In persuading both musicologists and legal theorists to
address issues of authorship, creativity, property and performance,
Andreas Rahmatian has put together a collection that is essential
reading for anyone concerned with the uneasy relationship of music
and law. This is a sophisticated, instructive and stimulating
book.' - Simon Frith, University of Edinburgh, UK'Rahmatian's
edited collection in ''Concepts of Music and Copyright' is
provoking and revelatory. It is an elegant colloquy between four
musicologists and four lawyers. The resultant discourse reveals a
rich seam of amazing stories and judicial decisions on authorship,
creativity and the law in the sphere of musical composition and
performance. The book is not only for music scholars and copyright
lawyers, but is ideal for any scholar who professes to enjoy
socio-legal philosophy, music lore, or the history of ideas.
Needless to add, it is a must-have for copyright judges.' - Uma
Suthersanen, University of London, UK 'This collection considers
the blurred lines between copyright law and music - from early
musicology to the Golden Age of MTV and the rise of YouTube and
mash-ups. It explores key concepts such as copyright works, subject
matter, authorship, originality, copyright infringement, safe
harbours, and takedown notices. This collection also examines the
clash between legal theories of music, and perceptions of copyright
law in musical communities.' - Matthew Rimmer, Queensland
University of Technology (QUT), Australia Copyright specialists
have often focused on the exploitation of copyright of music and on
infringement, but not on the question of how copyright
conceptualises music. This highly topical volume brings together
specialists in music, musicology and copyright law, providing a
genuinely interdisciplinary research approach. It compares and
contrasts the concepts of copyright law with those of music and
musical performance. Several tensions emerge between the ideas of
music as a living art and of the musical work as a basis for
copyright protection. The expert contributors discuss the notions
of the musical work, performance, originality, authorship in music
and in copyright, and co-ownership from the disciplinary
perspectives of music, musicology and copyright law. The book also
examines the role of the Musicians' Union in the evolution of
performers' rights in UK copyright law, and, in an empirical study,
the transaction costs theory for notice-and-takedown regimes in
relation to songs uploaded on YouTube. This unique study offers an
interdisciplinary perspective for academics, policymakers and legal
practitioners seeking a state-of-the-art understanding of music and
copyright law. Contributors: J. Butt, M. Parker Dixon, A. Firth,
P.J. Heald, B. Heile, A. Rahmatian, C. Waelde, J. Williamson
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