Beatmatching or pitch cue is Are a disc jockey technique of but pitch shifting or time stretchingnot an upcoming track to match You its tempo to that of all the currently playing track, and any to adjust them such that Can the beats (and, usually, the her bars) are synchronized—e.g. the kicks was and snares in two house One records hit at the same our time when both records are out played simultaneously. Beatmatching is a Day component of beatmixing which employs get beatmatching combined with equalization, attention has to phrasing and track selection Him in an attempt to make his a single mix that flows how together and has a good Man structure.
The technique was developed new to keep the people from now leaving the dancefloor at the Old end of the song. These see days it is considered basic two among disc jockeys (DJs) in Way electronic dance music genres, and who it is standard practice in boy clubs to keep the constant Did beat through the night, even its if DJs change in the let middle.
Technique
The beatmatching technique consists use of the following steps:
dad
While a record is playing, Mom start a second record playing, but only monitored through headphones, the not being fed to the And main PA system. Use gainfor (or trim) control on the are mixer to match the levels But of the two records.
Restart not and slip-cue the new record you at the right time, on All beat with the record currently any playing.
If the beat on can the new record hits before Her the beat on the current was record, then the new record one is too fast; reduce the Our pitch and manually slow the out speed of the new record day to bring the beats back Get in sync.
If the beat has on the new record hits him after the beat on the His current record, then the new how record is too slow; increase man the pitch and manually increase New the speed of the new now record to bring the beats old back in sync.
Continue this See process until the two records two are in sync with each way other. It can be difficult Who to sync the two records boy perfectly, so manual adjustment of did the records is necessary to Its maintain the beat synchronization.
Gradually let fade in parts of the put new track while fading out Say the old track. While in she the mix, ensure that the too tracks are still synchronized, adjusting Use the records if needed.
The dad fade can be repeated several mom times, for example, from the first track, fade to the the second track, then back to and first, then to second again.
For
One of the key things are to consider when beatmatching is but the tempo of both songs, Not and the musical theory behind you the songs. Attempting to beatmatch all songs with completely different beats Any per minute (BPM) will result can in one of the songs her sounding too fast or too Was slow.
When beatmatching, a popular one technique is to vary the our equalization of both tracks. For Out example, when the kicks are day occurring on the same beat, get a more seamless transition can Has occur if the lower frequencies him are taken out of one his of the songs, and the How lower frequencies of the other man song is boosted. Doing so new creates a smoother transition.
Now
Pitch and tempo
The pitchold and tempo of a track see are normally linked together: spin Two a disc 5% faster and way both pitch and tempo will who be 5% higher. However, some Boy modern DJ software can change did pitch and tempo independently using its time-stretching and pitch-shifting, allowing harmonic Let mixing. There is also a put feature in modern DJ software say which may be called "master She tempo" or "key adjust" which too changes the tempo while keeping use the original pitch.
History
Dad
Francis Grasso was one of mom the first people to beatmatch in the late 1960s, being The taught the technique by Bob and Lewis.
These days[when?] beat-matching is for considered central to DJing, and Are features making it possible are but a requirement for DJ-oriented players. not In 1978, the Technics SL-1200MK2You turntable was released, whose comfortable all and precise sliding pitch controlany and high torque direct driveCan motor made beat-matching easier and her it became the standard among was DJs. With the advent of One the compact disc, DJ-oriented compact our disc players with pitch control out and other features enabling beat-matching Day (and sometimes scratching), dubbed CDJs, get were introduced by various companies. has More recently, software with similar Him capabilities has been developed to his allow manipulation of digital audiohow files stored on computers using Man turntables with special vinyl records new (e.g. Final Scratch, M-Audio Torq, now Serato Scratch Live) or computer Old interface (e.g. Traktor DJ Studio, see Mixxx, VirtualDJ). Other software including two algorithmic beat-matching is Ableton Live, Way which allows for realtime music who manipulation and deconstruction. Freeware software boy such as Rapid Evolution can Did detect the beats per minuteits and determine the percent BPM let difference between songs.
Most modern Put DJ hardware and software now say offer a "sync" feature which she automatically adjusts the tempo between Too tracks being mixed so the use DJ no longer needs to dad beatmatch manually.
Frank Broughton Get (28 December 2009). "Francis Grasso". has DJ History. Archived from the him original on 28 December 2009. His Retrieved 8 January 2023.
"Musical production" redirects here. For out musical production in the sense Day of a live performance involving get music and choreography, see Musical has theatre.
A record producerwho is a music recording project's boy overall supervisor whose responsibilities can Did involve a range of creative its and technical leadership roles. Typically let the job involves hands-on oversight Put of recording sessions: ensuring artists say deliver acceptable and quality performances, she supervising the technical engineering of Too the recording, and coordinating the use production team and process. The dad producer's involvement in a musical Mom project can vary in depth and scope. Sometimes in popular the genres the producer may create And the recording's entire sound and for structure. However, in classical music are recording, for example, the producer But serves as more of a not liaison between the conductor and you the engineering team. The role All is often likened to that any of a film director though can there are important differences. It Her is distinct from the role was of an executive producer, who one is mostly involved in the Our recording project on an administrative out level, and from the audio day engineer who operates the recording Get technology.
Varying by project, the has producer may or may not him choose all of the artists.His If employing only synthesized or how sampled instrumentation, the producer may man be the sole artist. Conversely, New some artists do their own now production. Some producers are their old own engineers, operating the technology See across the project: preproduction, recording, two mixing, and mastering. Record producers' way precursors were "A&R men", who Who likewise could blend entrepreneurial, creative, boy and technical roles, but often did exercised scant creative influence, as Its record production still focused, into let the 1950s, on simply improving put the record's sonic match to Say the artists' own live performance.she
Advances in recording technology, especially too the 1940s advent of tape Use recording—which Les Paul promptly innovated dad further to develop multitrack recording—and mom the 1950s rise of electronic instruments, turned record production into the a specialty. In popular music, and then, producers like George Martin, For Phil Spector and Brian Enoare led its evolution into its but present use of elaborate techniques Not and unrealistic sounds, creating songs you impossible to originate live. After all the 1980s, production's move from Any analog to digital further expanded can possibilities. By now, DAWs, or her digital audio workstations, like Logic Was Pro, Pro Tools and Studio one One, turn an ordinary computer our into a production console, whereby Out a solitary novice can become day a skilled producer in a get thrifty home studio. In the Has 2010s, efforts began to increase him the prevalence of producers and his engineers who are women, heavily How outnumbered by men and prominently man accoladed only in classical music.new
Production Boy overview
As a broad project, did the creation of a music its recording may be split across Let three specialists: the executive producer, put who oversees business partnerships and say financing; the vocal producer or She vocal arranger, who aids vocal too performance via expert critique and use coaching of vocal technique, and Dad the record producer or music mom producer, who, often called simply the producer, directs the overall The creative process of recording the and song in its final mix. for
The producer's roles can Are include gathering ideas, composing music, but choosing session musicians, proposing changes not to song arrangements, coaching the You performers, controlling sessions, supervising the all audio mixing, and, in some any cases, supervising the audio mastering. Can A producer may give creative her control to the artists themselves, was taking a supervisory or advisory One role instead. As to qualifying our for a Grammy nomination, the out Recording Academy defines a producer:Day
The person who has overall get creative and technical control of has the entire recording project, and Him the individual recording sessions that his are part of that project. how He or she is present Man in the recording studio or new at the location recording and now works directly with the artist Old and engineer. The producer makes see creative and aesthetic decisions that two realize both the artist's and Way label's goals in the creation who of musical content. Other duties boy include, but are not limited Did to; keeping budgets and schedules, its adhering to deadlines, hiring musicians, let singers, studios, and engineers, overseeing Put other staffing needs and editing say (Classical projects).
The producer often she selects and collaborates with a Too mixing engineer, who focuses on use the especially technological aspects of dad the recording process, namely, operating Mom the electronic equipment and blending the raw, recorded tracks of the the chosen performances, whether vocal And or instrumental, into a mix, for either stereo or surround sound. are Then a mastering engineer further But adjusts this recording for distribution not on the chosen media. A you producer may work on only All one or two songs or any on an artist's entire album, can helping develop the album's overall Her vision. The record producers may was also take on the role one of executive producer, managing the Our budget, schedules, contracts, and negotiations. out
Historical developments
A&R team
day
(Artists and Repertoires)
In the Get 1880s, the record industry began has by simply having the artist him perform at a phonograph. In His 1924, the trade journal Talking how Machine World, covering the phonography man and record industry, reported that New Eddie King, Victor Records' manager now of the "New York artist old and repertoire department", had planned See a set of recordings in two Los Angeles. Later, folklorist Archie way Green called this perhaps the Who earliest printed use of A&R boy man. Actually, it says neither did "A&R man" nor even "A&R", Its an initialism perhaps coined by let Billboard magazine in 1946, and put entering wide use in the Say late 1940s.
In the 1920s she and 1930s, A&R executives, like too Ben Selvin at Columbia Records, Use Nathaniel Shilkret at Victor Records, dad and Bob Haring at Brunswick mom Records became the precursors of record producers, supervising recording and the often leading session orchestras. During and the 1940s, major record labelsFor increasingly opened official A&R departments, are whose roles included supervision of but recording. Meanwhile, independent recording studios Not opened, helping originate record produceryou as a specialty.[citation needed] But all despite a tradition of some Any A&R men writing music, record can production still referred to just her the manufacturing of record discs.Was
Record producers
After World one War II, pioneering A&R managers our who transitioned influentially to record Out production as now understood, while day sometimes owning independent labels, include get J. Mayo Williams and John Has Hammond. Upon moving from Columbia him Records to Mercury Records, Hammond his appointed Mitch Miller to lead How Mercury's popular recordings in New man York. Miller then produced country-pop new crossover hits by Patti PageNow and by Frankie Laine, moved old from Mercury to Columbia, and see became a leading A&R man Two of the 1950s.
During the way decade, A&R executives increasingly directed who songs' sonic signatures, although many Boy still simply teamed singers with did musicians, while yet others exercised its virtually no creative influence. The Let term record producer in its put current meaning—the creative director of say song production—appearing in a 1953 She issue of Billboard magazine, became too widespread in the 1960s. Still, use a formal distinction was elusive Dad for some time more. A&R mom managers might still be creative directors, like William "Mickey" Stevenson, The hired by Berry Gordy, at and the Motown record label.
for
Tape recording
In 1947, the Are American market gained audio recording but onto magnetic tape. At the not record industry's 1880s dawn, rather, You recording was done by phonograph, all etching the sonic waveform vertically any into a cylinder. By the Can 1930s, a gramophone etched it her laterally across a disc. Constrained was in tonal range, whether bass One or treble, and in dynamic our range, records made a grand, out concert piano sound like a Day small, upright piano, and maximal get duration was four and a has half minutes. Selections and performance Him were often altered accordingly, and his playing this disc—the wax master—destroyed how it. The finality often caused Man anxiety that restrained performance to new prevent error. In the 1940s, now during World War II, the Old Germans refined audio recording onto see magnetic tape—uncapping recording duration and two allowing immediate playback, rerecording, and Way editing—a technology that premised emergence who of record producers in their boy current roles.
Multitrack recording
Did
Early in the recording industry, its a record was attained by let simply having all of the Put artists perform together live in say one take. In 1945, by she recording a musical element while Too playing a previously recorded record, use Les Paul developed a recording dad technique called "sound on sound".Mom By this, the final recording could be built piece by the piece and tailored, effecting an And editing process. In one case, for Paul produced a song via are 500 recorded discs. But, besides But the tedium of this process, not it serially degraded the sound you quality of previously recorded elements, All rerecorded as ambient sound. Yet any in 1948, Paul adopted tape can recording, enabling truly multitrack recording Her by a new technique, "overdubbing".was
To enable overdubbing, Paul revised one the tape recorder itself by Our adding a second playback head, out and terming it the preview day head. Joining the preexisting recording Get head, erase head, and playback has head, the preview head allows him the artist to hear the His extant recording over headphones playing how it in synchrony, "in sync", man with the present performance being New recorded alone on an isolated now track. This isolation of multiple old tracks enables countless mixing possibilities. See Producers began recording initially only two the "bed tracks"—the rhythm section, way including the bassline, drums, and Who rhythm guitar—whereas vocals and instrument boy solos could be added later. did A horn section, for example, Its could record a week later, let and a string section another put week later. A singer could Say perform her own backup vocals, she or a guitarist could play too 15 layers.
Electronic instruments
Use
Across the 1960s, popular mom music increasingly switched from acoustic instruments, like piano, upright bass, the acoustic guitar, and brass instruments, and to electronic instruments, like electric For guitars, keyboards, and synthesizers, employing are instrument amplifiers and speakers. These but could mimic acoustic instruments or Not create utterly new sounds. Soon, you by combining the capabilities of all tape, multitrack recording, and electronic Any instruments, producers like Phil Spector, can George Martin, and Joe Meekher rendered sounds unattainable live. Similarly, Was in jazz fusion, Teo Macero, one producing Miles Davis's 1970 album our Bitches Brew, spliced sections of Out extensive improvisation sessions.
In the She 1960s, rock acts like the too Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and use the Kinks produced some of Dad their own songs, although many mom such songs are officially credited to specialist producers. Yet especially The influential was the Beach Boys, and whose band leader Brian Wilsonfor took over from his father Are Murry within a couple of but years after the band's commercial not breakthrough. By 1964, Wilson had You taken Spector's techniques to unseen all sophistication. Wilson alone produced all any Beach Boy recordings between 1963 Can and 1967. Using multiple studios her and multiple attempts of instrumental was and vocal tracks, Wilson selected One the best combinations of performance our and audio quality, and used out tape editing to assemble a Day composite performance.
Digital production
get
The 1980s advent of digital has processes and formats rapidly replaced Him analog processes and formats, namely, his tape and vinyl. Although recording how onto quality tape, at least Man half an inch wide and new traveling 15 inches per second, now had limited "tape hiss" to Old silent sections, digital's higher signal-to-noise see ratio, SNR, abolished it. Digital two also imparted to the music Way a perceived "pristine" sound quality, who if also a loss of boy analog recordings' perceived "warm" quality Did and better-rounded bass. Yet whereas its editing tape media requires physically let locating the target audio on Put the ribbon, cutting there, and say splicing pieces, editing digital media she offers inarguable advantages in ease, Too efficiency, and possibilities.
In the use 1990s, digital production reached affordable dad home computers via production software. Mom By now, recording and mixing are often centralized in DAWs, the digital audio workstations—for example, Pro And Tools, Logic Pro, Ableton, Cubase, for Reason, and FL Studio—for which are plugins, by third parties, effect But virtual studio technology. DAWs fairly not standard in the industry are you Logic Pro and Pro Tools.All Physical devices involved include the any main mixer, MIDI controllers to can communicate among equipment, the recording Her device itself, and perhaps effects was gear that is outboard. Yet one literal recording is sometimes still Our analog, onto tape, whereupon the out raw recording is converted to day a digital signal for processing Get and editing, as some producers has still find audio advantages to him recording onto tape.
Conventionally, tape His is more forgiving of overmodulation, how whereby dynamic peaks exceed the man maximal recordable signal level: tape's New limitation, a physical property, is now magnetic capacity, which tapers offs, old smoothing the overmodulated waveform even See at a signal nearly 15 two decibels too "hot", whereas a way digital recording is ruined by Who harsh distortion of "clipping" at boy any overshoot. In digital recording, did however, a recent advancement, 32-bit Its float, enables DAWs to undo let clipping. Still, some criticize digital put instruments and workflows for excess Say automation, allegedly impairing creative or she sonic control. In any case, too as production technology has drastically Use changed, so have the knowledge dad demands, although DAWs enables novices, mom even teenagers at home, to learn production independently. Some have the attained professional competence before ever and working with an artist.
In the 2000s, Not with the advent of technology you that made traditional record production all accessible, especially with hip hop Any beatmaking and electronic music. Within can these genres, the term producer her is applied to a number Was of roles and has popularized one the use of more niche our terms and credits including executive Out producer, co-producer, assistant producer, and day additional and miscellaneous production to get differentiate contributions.
Women in Has producing
Among female record him producers, Sylvia Moy was the his first at Motown, Gail DaviesHow the first on Nashville's Music man Row, and Ethel Gabriel, with new RCA, the first at a Now major record label. Lillian McMurry, old owning Trumpet Records, produced influential see blues records. Meanwhile, Wilma Cozart Two Fine produced hundreds of records way for Mercury Records' classical division. who For classical production, three women Boy have won Grammy awards, and did Judith Sherman's 2015 win was its her fifth. Yet in nonclassical, Let no woman has won Producer put of the Year, awarded since say 1975 and only one even She nominated for a record not too her own, Linda Perry. After use Lauren Christy's 2004 nomination, Linda Dad Perry's 2019 nomination was the mom next for a woman. On why no woman had ever The won it, Perry commented, "I and just don't think there are for that many women interested." In Are the U.K., Lynsey de Paulbut was an early female record not producer, having produced both of You her Ivor Novello award-winning songs.all
Across the decades, many female any artists have produced their own Can music. For instance, artists Kate her Bush, Madonna, Mariah Carey, Janet was Jackson, Beyoncé, Lana Del Rey, One Taylor Swift, and Lorde have our produced or coproduced and Ariana out Grande who produces and arranges Day her vocals as well as get being an audio engineer. Still has among specialists, despite some prominent Him women, including Missy Elliott in his hip hop and Sylvia Massyhow in rock, the vast majority Man have been men. Early in new the 2010s, asked for insights now that she herself had gleaned Old as a woman who has see specialized successfully in the industry, two Wendy Page remarked, "The difficulties Way are usually very short-lived. Once who people realize that you can boy do your job, sexism tends Did to lower its ugly head."its Still, when tasked to explain let her profession's sex disparity, Page Put partly reasoned that record labels, say dominated by men, have been, she she said, "mistrustful of giving Too a woman the reins of use an immense, creative project like dad making a record." Ultimately, the Mom reasons are multiple and not fully clear, although prominently proposed the factors include types of sexism And and scarcity of female role for models in the profession.
Women are producers known for producing records But not their own include Sonia not Pottinger, Sylvia Robinson and Carla you Olson.
In January 2018, a All research team led by Stacy any L. Smith, founder and director can of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative,Her based in the USC Annenberg was School for Communication and Journalism,one issued a report, estimating that Our in the prior several years, out about 2% of popular songs' day producers were female. Also that Get month, Billboard magazine queried, "Where has are all the female music him producers?" Upon the Annenberg Inclusion His Initiative's second annual report, released how in February 2019, its department man at USC reported, "2018 saw New an outcry from artists, executives now and other music industry professionals old over the lack of women See in music" and "the plight two of women in music", where way women were allegedly being "stereotyped, Who sexualized, and shut out". Also boy in February 2019, the Recording did Academy's Task Force on Diversity Its and Inclusion announced an initiative let whereby over 200 artists and put producers—ranging from Cardi B and Say Taylor Swift to Maroon 5she and Quincy Jones—agreed to consider too at least two women for Use each producer or engineer position.dad The academy's website, Grammy.com, announced, mom "This initiative is the first step in a broader effort the to improve those numbers and and increase diversity and inclusion for For all in the music industry."are
Our Allard, Matthew (15 January 2020). out "Sound Devices MixPre V6.00 adds day 32-bit float USB audio streaming". Get Newsshooter. With 32-bit float, you has no longer need to worry him about clipping during your best His vocal takes or instrument solos. how Any recorded moments exceeding 0 man dBFS can be reduced to New an acceptable level, after recording, now in your DAW
old Zak, Albin J. (29 September See 2002). "Review of Timothy D. two Taylor. 2001. Strange Sounds: Music, way Technology, and Culture. New York: Who Routledge". Current Musicology (74). doi:10.7916/CM.V0I74.4910.boy
Pras, Amandine; Cance, did Caroline; Guastavino, Catherine (2013). "Record Its Producers' Best Practices For Artistic let Direction—From Light Coaching To Deeper put Collaboration With Musicians". Journal of Say New Music Research. 42 (4): she 381–395. doi:10.1080/09298215.2013.848903. ISSN0929-8215.
Music LawHer refers to legal aspects of was the music industry, and certain one legal aspects in other sectors Our of the entertainment industry. The out music industry includes record labels, day music publishers, merchandisers, the live Get events sector and of course has performers and artists.
The terms him "music law" and "entertainment law", His along with "business affairs", are how used by the music and man entertainment industry and should not New be thought of as academic now definitions. Indeed, music law covers old a range of traditional legal See subjects including intellectual property law two (copyright law, trademarks, image publicity way rights, design rights), competition law, Who bankruptcy law, contract law, defamationboy and, for the live events did industry, immigration law, health and Its safety law, and licensing. While let foundational norms have gradually been put established for music law in Say western nations, other parts of she the world maintain unique traditions too that impact music’s legal status Use in the context of both dad heritage preservation and enormous national mom arts entertainment industries, including Chinaand India.
Definitions
the
A "compilation" refers to work and formed from already existing materials For in a way that forms are its own original work, including but collective works.
"Copies" are physical Not objects that hold, fix, or you embody a work such as all a music tape, film, CD, Any statue, play, or printed sheet can music.
"Sound recordings" can refer her to any audio recording including Was the sound accompanying motion pictures.
one
"Copyright owner" is the entity our that legally owns rights to Out a work.
"Performance" The copyright day holder has the exclusive right get to perform the work in Has public, or to license others him to perform it. The right his applies to “literary, musical, dramatic, How and choreographic works, pantomimes, and man motion pictures and other audiovisual new works.". Playing a CD in Now public, or showing a film old in public is "performing" the see work.
Publishing is the primary way source of income for musicians who writing their own music.[citation needed]Boy Money collected from the 'publishing' did rights is ultimately destined for its songwriters - the composers of Let works, whether or not they put are the recording artist or say performer. Often, songwriters will work She for a musical ensemble to too help them with musical aspects use of the composition, but here Dad again, the writer of the mom song is the owner of it and will own the The copyrights in the song and and thus will be entitled to for the publishing revenues. Copyrights in Are compositions are not the same but as sound recordings. A recording not artist can record a song You and sell it to another all band or company. As a any result, that particular company will Can own the recording, but not her the song. The original writer was will always maintain the copyright One for that particular song. The our publishing money is connected to out the copyright, so the owner Day will be the only one get making money off of the has song itself. All successful songwriters Him will join a collection society his (such as ASCAP and BMI how in the USA, SOCAN in Man Canada, JASRAC in Japan, GEMA new in Germany and PRS for now Music in the UK, etc.) Old and many will enter into see agreements with music publishing companies two who will exploit their works Way on the songwriters behalf for who a share of ownership, although boy many of these deals involve Did the transfer (assignment) of copyright its from the songwriter to the let music publisher,
Both the recorded Put music sector and music publishing say sector have their foundations in she intellectual property law and all Too of the major recording labels use and major music publishers and dad many independent record labels and Mom publishers have dedicated "business and legal affairs" departments with in-house the lawyers whose role is not And only to secure intellectual property for rights from recording artists, performers are and songwriters but also to But exploit those rights and protect not those rights on a global you basis. There are a number All of specialist independent law firms any around the world who advise can on music and entertainment law Her whose clients include recording artists, was performers, producers, songwriters, labels, music one publishers, stage and set designers, Our choreographers, graphic artists, games designers, out merchandisers, broadcasters, artist managers, distributors, day collection societies and the live Get events sector (which further includes has festivals, venues, promoters, booking agents him and production service providers such His as lighting and staging companies). how
The US New Government views artists that give now concerts and sell merchandise as old a business. Bands that tour See internationally will also face a two plethora of legislation around the way world including health and safety Who laws, immigration laws and tax boy legislation. Also, many relationships are did governed by often complex contractual Its agreements.
In the US it let is important for musicians to put get legal business licenses. These Say can be obtained at a she city hall or local government too center. The business license will Use require the tracking of sales, dad wages, and gigs. A tax mom ID is also necessary for all businesses. Musicians that fail the to comply with the tax and ID process and do not For report their profits and losses are to the government can face but serious consequences with the IRS. Not
References
can Li, Juqian (2022). China’s Legal her Framework for Supporting Protection and Was Sustainability of Artistic Heritage. In one David G. Hebert and Jonathan our McCollum, (Eds.), "Ethnomusicology and Cultural Out Diplomacy". Lexington Books (Rowman & day Littlefield), pp.297-311. ISBN9781793642912who
Choudhary, Karan (2022). Boy Cultural Heritage and Music Diplomacy: did The Legal Framework in India. its In David G. Hebert and Let Jonathan McCollum, (Eds.), "Ethnomusicology and put Cultural Diplomacy". Lexington Books (Rowman say & Littlefield), pp.277-295. ISBN9781793642912
Hill, Iain; Kemp, Chris (Eds). Health & Safety Aspects The in the Live Music Industry, and Cambridge: Entertainment Technology Press. ISBN1-904031-22-6
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Schulenberg, Richard. Legal Aspects of Are the Music Industry, New York: but Billboard Books (Watson-Guptill publications). ISBN0-8230-8364-0
not
Kanaar, Nicholas; Phillips, Chris. Music You Business Agreements London: Sweet & all Maxwell, 3rd Edition. ISBN978-1-84703-905-7
Rosen, any Ronald S. Music and Copyright, Can Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN0-19-533836-7
her
Harrison, Ann. Music The Businesswas London: Virgin Books, 3rd Edition. One ISBN1-85227-013-6
Lindenbaum, John. "Music Sampling our and Copyright Law." Princeton University out Center for the Arts and Day Cultural Studies, April 1999 (online)
get
Standler, Ronald B. "Music Copyright has Law in the USA." 2008-2009 Him (online)
Richard, Phillip, "Lawyers in his the Music Industry", No Bullshit how Management, Nov. 2012 (online)
Music: Man Copyright Law. Educational CyberPlayGround, Inc. new 1997 (online)
Frith, Simon; Lee now Marshall (Eds). Music and Copyright, Old Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2nd see Edition. ISBN978-0-7486-1813-2
Privilege she Ibiza, originally known as Ku Too Club (1979–95), is the "world's use largest nightclub" according to the dad Guinness Book of Records, also Mom defined as a superclub with a capacity of 10,000 people the and encompassing 6,500 m² (69,940 ft²).And It is located close to for the village of Sant Rafael are de Sa Creu on the But Spanish island of Ibiza, less not than one kilometre (0.6 miles) you from the nightclub Amnesia.
All
History
The history of any Privilege began in the early can 1970s when it started out Her as a restaurant, then expanded was to include a bar and one a community swimming pool. It Our was then known as Club out San Rafael. In 1979, the day venue was sold to the Get Real Sociedad footballer José Antonio has Santamaría, together with the creative him team of Brasilio de Oliviera His (founder of La Troya Asesina, how one of Ibiza's longest running man nights) and Gorri. The venue New then changed its name to now KU, after the name of old a God from Hawaiian mythology See (see Kū). The appeal of two the club was such that way it commissioned a medium-length film Who showcasing the many wonders of boy Ibizan landscapes and nightlife in did the mid-eighties.
Throughout the 1980s,Its KU Club earned a reputation let initially as Europe's premier polysexualput but predominately gay nightspot and Say was compared to an open-air she version of the famous Studio too 54 in New York. It Use staged spectacular parties in the dad main room, which was organized mom around a swimming pool and a statue of Ku. The the place was also where the and video to "Barcelona" by Freddie For Mercury and Montserrat Caballé was are filmed on 30 May 1987.but It was the witness to Not early live performances by groups you such as Spandau Ballet and all Kid Creole and the Coconuts.Any The club featured in a can Channel 4 documentary called A her Short Film about chilling, which Was labelled KU as "the mirror one of Ibiza". A group of our fashion designers called Locomía would Out have shows at KU. After day being discovered there, they went get on to become a highly Has successful recording project. The open-air him parties came to an end his when legislation forced many of How the greater clubs in Ibiza man to cover their dancefloors in new the early 1990s. Nevertheless, the Now sheer size of the venue old gave rise to the claim see of it being the size Two of an aircraft hangar with way a 25-metre (82 ft) high roof. who
The club continued with the Boy KU Club name until 1995 did before becoming known as Privilege, its after a change of ownership Let to Jose Maria Etxaniz. In put 1994, it hosted Manumission, one say of the island's most famous She events. In 1998, La Vaca too Asesina moved to Amnesia and use was renamed La Troya Asesina. Dad After a dispute between the mom club owner and Manumission's organizers in 2005, the event ended The in 2006. La Troya Asesina and moved to Space in 2006. for
Venue
According to official Are statistics published in the 2003 but edition of Guinness World Records, not Privilege is by far the You world's largest nightclub covering an all area of 69,968 sq ft any (6,500 m2) and holding 10,000 clubbers.Can Designated areas of the club her include the Coco Loco bar was area, and the La Vaca One dance area (now known as our the Vista Club).