Legal Question in Intellectual Property in Virginia

Legal issues with playing music in lobby

Hi,

I work for a small town bank in which we have a background music feed playing throughout the bank (including the lobby) at three of our six branches. Currently we pay a monthly fee for the satellite audio feed. I was interested in doing that �in house�, rather than through the current satellite system. Are there any legal issues with playing CD�s that the bank has purchased? I would like to buy several CD�s, turn the tracks into MP3�s and place them on my server. Then distribute the MP3�s to the speakers via this product

http://www.turtlebeach.com/site/products/audiotron/producthome.asp the AudioTron-100. In this situation, would there be any copyright issues or other legal issues such as royalties?


Asked on 12/17/03, 9:10 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Lawrence Graves Coolidge & Graves PLLC

Re: Legal issues with playing music in lobby

Your ownership of a legitimately-sold CD does not give you the right of "public performance" (i.e., playing for a public audience in your place of business). Your background radio is also a technical violation; some fine day you are likely to get a letter from BMI or ASCAP telling you that this is a no-no and demanding license fees. Music law is an area with which I am only generally familiar, and I would be happy to refer you to a specialist to evaluate your situation and options.

Best wishes,

LDWG

Read more
Answered on 12/17/03, 10:34 am
Elizabeth Schaefer SCHAEFER LAW FIRM

Re: Legal issues with playing music in lobby

Yes, there are issues related to playing the CDs in your bank lobbies. The copyright owners of the music on the CDs have the exclusive right to publicly perform that music, among other exclusive rights. Your playing that music in the lobbies would be a public performance that violates the exclusive right. In this regard, you should review the contract you have with the satellite service to confirm that they have represented and warranted that they have sufficient rights to provide you with the music for public performance, and that they would indemnify you against any damages arising from or related to such performance. If you really want to play music yourself, you can seek licenses from ASCAP and BMI who, combined, own the copyrights to practically all music that you might want to play. This is what bars and nightclubs typically do.

Read more
Answered on 12/18/03, 4:07 pm


Related Questions & Answers

More Intellectual Property questions and answers in Virginia