fishermanbob wrote:Actually his instrumental tracks were used as a backing track for an instructional video for a corporation. He received a check over $1000.
Then it was mechanical royalties owed to the publisher
The only way BMI would have paid that kind of royalties would be if that video played on prime time TV on one of the major networks....or got heavy radio rotation in several major markets. PROs only collect broadcasts on broadcast media.
There have arisen several other ways of collecting royalties in the digital age. They wouldn't collect for Spotify/YouTube/Pandora because those are digital streams, not the same as a broadcast.
I have experimented with a few of them
There is Tunecore, CDBaby Pro, Symphonic to collect on sales through digital stores
AdRev is YouTube's version of collecting advertising revenue that is placed on your music when it's used on a youtube video
Then there is Sound Exchange for performance royalties on digital video.
And my favorite now Audiam, who finds your music being used by others on YouTube and puts an ad on it. They also distribute an unlimited amount of your music to the various digital distributors for a flat fee per year, whereas Tunecore/CDBaby/Symphonic charge per product (single, album) per year
Believe or not those are all doing different kinds of royalties in the streaming age.
You should still sign up with a PRO just in case something starts getting broadcast...I'd say BMI in your case because it's free for the songwriter.