 "Will EU royalty changes come at creators' expense?"
(By Robin
Gibb, Eurobserver, September 19 2006)
EUOBSERVER / FOCUS - A few months ago I found myself
in the unusual position of speaking to the European Commission in
Brussels. I was there speaking in the name of CISAC, the international
body representing authors' societies.
The Commission is conducting a review of the licensing of creators'
rights, which directly affects the income of millions of creators
worldwide.
It was therefore our job to explain the vital role that collective
management societies play in enabling us, the creators, to collect the
revenue that is rightfully ours.
Authors societies frequently get bad press as abusive faceless monopolies
acting against consumers and indeed authors' interests. Nothing could be
farther from the truth.
European collection societies were set up by authors as non-profit
organisations and are run by the authors, composers and publishers who are
their members to administer their rights.
Of course, the societies have never been popular with the big
multi-national commercial broadcasters and other music users who are
constantly trying to cut their own "costs" at our expense.
Who benefits?
At the hearing in Brussels, it was perfectly clear that they wished to
devalue copyright in order to benefit their shareholders. It was less
clear where the consumer or any author would benefit.
Crucial to societies – and the 2.5 million creators whom they represent
– are the reciprocal agreements between societies which make up the
network which enables each society to offer in its own territory the
entire world's music repertoire. This system has benefited me and my
fellow creators in at least two ways.
This network is central to my work as a songwriter, not a performer.
I have co-written many songs with my brothers over the years such as
"Chain Reaction" for Diana Ross and "Heartbreaker" for
Dionne Warwick. Without this system, there is no way that we would have
been able to receive a fair reward in all countries for our work as
writers.
Secondly, in these days of multi-national copyright users, the network
creates collective bargaining power, which affords authors less well known
than me some chance to receive an equitable reward for their works.
With increased threats to the creative community, the agreements between
collection societies, which underpin the network, are more essential than
ever before.
A ludicrous idea voiced at the hearing, was that competition between
authors' societies in the grant of licences to users would somehow benefit
creators.
If a user were able to obtain clearance rights for my song "Night
Fever" from 24 competing organisations, which organisation do you
think the user would choose?
The user would of course choose the organisation offering the cheapest
possible price. What interest would I have in such a scenario? I might be
in a strong enough position to personally fight this reduction in value by
withdrawing my rights from societies that undercut each other but other
creators, less well known, would be stuck.
Cultural devaluation
Royalty devaluation will also inevitably lead to cultural devaluation. As
a creator who has benefited from the strength of the Anglo-American
repertoire, I have no doubt that my genre of music would survive
competition – albeit financially decimated.
But have a thought for Europe's cultural diversity which would be
seriously jeopardised if the current system of collective management of
creators' rights were destroyed.
The Commission is currently threatening to fine collection societies for
infringement of competition laws as if they were another Microsoft.
In reality, they are non-profit making organisations and fining them is
fining every creator throughout Europe. Most artists are dependent on
royalties and it is desperately unfair to have their livelihoods
threatened by an external party claiming to champion their cause.
I sincerely hope that the European Commission understood my message and
will continue to listen to the voice of creators before taking any
decision. It is above all a question of avoiding the erosion of the
authors' negotiating position in the sole interest of a small band of very
powerful broadcasters.
The author is singer/songwriter and founding member of the Bee Gees. As
a member of the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters, he
participated in the Oral Hearing organised by the European Commission in
Brussels in June in a competition proceeding against CISAC, the
international body representing authors' societies. This comment first
appeared in BILLBOARD
 Back to List of Articles
|