Its not just about making money, say you want your track released on a record label, even if you take no pay or little pay for whatever reason you do that. I can think main ones would be to get recognised or like a foot in the door, or just the need for the world (a greater audience) to hear your song or to set your song in stone by recording and thus archiving it to more permanent means that a record label can do. Thus creating a legacy that may outlive you.doctorbob wrote: Tue Apr 26, 2022 8:51 pm Not interested in making money from my OSSC tracks! But then, what fool would pay me money for them anyway??
But, good questions for those who might wish for their OSC tracks to raise a few pennies.
dB
I have a valid reason why I cannot make money from Music however I as with the above reasons I would love to have a track of mine released with a record label. In that case I would choose not to take pay.
I doubt a record label would release your track if its already released under CC? Could the record label even legally sell the song to customers? I can't see them signing you if they get nothing out of it.
Maybe the goal is to get signed rather than you making money.
Potentially a musician could make their best song yet for this competition and be unable to do anything with it. That would seem like a waste to me.
I do not know enough about Music Jams/Competitions but a couple others I looked into previously (that were more game music related) allowed you to release the music under any license you choose to and you would retain full rights. It is the same in all of the computer game jams I have seen on my travels where you create a computer game from scratch in a set period of time, you always retain the full rights to your game (I have never entered one yet)...
Example this is a well known game jam site..
https://ldjam.com/events/ludum-dare/rules
Scroll down to read under ownership.
