Here are some answers to our most frequently asked questions for artists:
All professional songwriters use professional demonstration recordings, or “demos,” for the songs they plan to market. Essentially, your song is the product, and your demo represents both you and your work. A high-quality recording is essential to showcase your song to music industry professionals effectively. Simply presenting lyrics alone is not sufficient.
The professionals at Royal Master Music specialize in presenting your song lyrics, poem, or song in the best possible light. They produce professional song recordings for both music publishers and self-published writers who have not yet secured a publisher. The fee charged by Royal Master Music covers the costs associated with the actual recording process. This includes the expertise of an experienced producer, singers, professional studio musicians, sound engineer, equipment expenses, and administrative costs such as office and advertising expenses.
While songwriters get paid when their songs are commercially released and become successful, the first step is getting discovered. A professional demo is a crucial tool in this process, ensuring your song stands out to industry professionals.
Over my many years in the music industry, I have never known any legitimate music professional to purchase a song outright. Songwriters earn money when their songs are sold in stores or online. Retailers only pay for the CDs they sell, returning unsold CDs to the record label. When a CD sells, a portion of the revenue goes to the record label, which then pays the songwriter(s) a royalty based on copyright laws. This royalty is typically about twelve cents per copy sold.
Your publisher (or you, if you are self-published) will be required to sign a “mechanical license” when your song is released. This license ensures that the record label will pay the statutory rate for every copy sold. If your song is new, it cannot be sold until you sign this license. Success in the music business benefits everyone involved—songwriters, music publishers, record producers, and recording artists—making collaboration essential.
Songwriters also earn money when their songs are played on the radio, with three cents earned for each play. This applies to jukeboxes, restaurants, nightclubs, malls, health clubs, and other venues. Additionally, songwriters are compensated for live performances. Organizations like BMI and ASCAP, known as performance rights organizations, act as collection agencies. They collect fees for song performances and pay the songwriters, keeping a percentage for themselves as their fee.
It is advisable to wait until you have a song on the market or on “hold” before joining a performance rights organization. A “hold” occurs when a record label asks you not to pitch your song to anyone else because they plan to record it for commercial release. If you join a performance rights organization beforehand, you may be charged a membership fee of several hundred dollars. However, if you have a released song or one on hold, they will often sign you up for free, as they are guaranteed to receive their percentage of the collected fees.
We provide you with a top-notch, professional demo recording of your song. The quality of your recording is crucial because it needs to sell the song to the listener, making them want to record it. A professionally recorded demo is essential for pitching your song to recording artists or their representatives with the goal of getting the song “cut.” Having a song “cut” means it is officially recorded by an artist for commercial release.
The music business, much like any other industry, requires a professional approach. Many newcomers arrive in Nashville with the misconception that they can simply send a song to a singer and achieve instant success. Nashville has seen millions of amateurs come and go. Songwriting is a profession that demands knowledge, hard work, perseverance, and a bit of luck. Many aspiring songwriters step off the bus in Nashville expecting to take the town by storm, only to realize that the music business requires a strategic and business-like approach.
I’ve known writers who have pitched their songs around Nashville for forty years without ever getting a major “cut,” not because their songs were bad, but because they didn’t understand the business. Conversely, I’ve seen writers become multi-platinum award-winning songwriters within three months of arriving in Nashville. As a songwriter, you must learn the business side of songwriting, just like any other business venture.
Are there guarantees? Unfortunately, no. The music business is unpredictable and no one can guarantee that your song will be selected by an industry professional or that it will lead to financial success. There are too many variables involved. Any company that guarantees your song’s release, money, and success is not being honest. Success in the music industry is a combination of talent, hard work, and sometimes, a bit of luck.
We use Professional Nashville Musicians and Singers in our recordings. Music and entertainment industry professionals such as record producers, music publishers, singers, TV producers, movie producers and advertising agencies expect “professional recordings” with actual musicians and singers from reputable music publishers and record labels such as Royal Master Music. Music industry professionals do not accept “ai”. Most “ai” are not a crafted song. Most of the “ai” generated recordings that are submitted are just the words recited by “ai” software that are not in a proper song format with four line verses, a four or eight line chorus, and from a one to four line refrain if the lyrics have a refrain. Not all songs have a refrain. The “ai” software does not differentiate between a properly crafted song. It just recites the words to a music track. That is not a crafted song. Songwriting is a craft and there are certain criteria that must be met in every song. For this reason professional music and entertainment Industry professionals consider “ai” a complete waste of their time.
The legal problem with “ai” or in other words, computer generated music and vocals provided by “ai” is that no record label, music publisher, recording artist, TV Producer, Movie Producer or Advertising Agency will consider an “ai” recording for use in their projects. Their Attorneys have advised them not to touch “ai” recordings because of possible future legal entanglements with the “ai” software developers. For example, if a song were to become successful and earn hundreds of thousands of dollars or even millions of dollars, you can bet the “ai” software writers and developers will claim that the music is theirs and file a lawsuit asking for financial compensation. Even if the “ai” software company proclaim to the writer that the writer owns the copyright, you can bet, if there are hundreds of thousands of dollars or millions of dollars involved, they will sue to try to get a percentage of those earnings. No one wants to deal with that and go through the legal expenses, time and hassle so music and entertainment industry professionals simply reject off-hand, “ai” recordings. There are famous singers suing “ai” for using their vocals, music publishers suing “ai” for copyright infringement, record labels suing “ai” for using their artists vocals without their permission and songwriters suing “ai” for using generic music and vocals that all sounds the same.
If you read the “Terms of Service” and “Privacy Policy” of these “ai” sites you will find that many are from 30 to 50 pages of “fine print’ in length. They know that most people will not read through all of that legal “mumbo jumbo” which even if you are an attorney is contradictory and confusing. Our Attorneys have read them. Their claim that you own the copyright is fraught with dozens of “if’s”, “and’s” or “but’s” and there are dozens of loopholes and contradictions in your so-called ownership rights and usage rights. The fine print says that they can use your song, your name and your personal and contact information in any way that they like. Their “Terms of Service” basically removes your control as the songwriter and their “Privacy Policy” which some are 20 pages in length is basically a “Non-Privacy Document” that allows the site to use and share your name, e-mail address and any other of your personal information that they have in any manner that they choose. Not good.
Our attorney, a retired Appellate Court Judge told me, “If you cannot write your contract in one page it’s worthless because no judge is going to read through dozens and dozens of pages of confusing, contradicting and mostly word game predicaments. He advised us that if you cannot say it clearly and plainly in one page, it’s not worth the paper or e-mail it’s written on.” Our information and contract states exactly what we will do for you plainly and clearly in one page. We do what we say and say what we do.
What we do when we receive an “ai” is to offer to arrange your lyrics into a proper song format if needed and then professionally record your song using actual musicians and singers. If you like the “ai” music style” we offer to produce your recording using a similar music style but make changes to the melody so that you have a totally unique and original song that does not infringe upon the “ai” software company’s music. You are 100% owner of all lyrics and original music that we produce for you. The music composition that we provide for you is referred to as “work for hire”. We do not ask for any percentage of the song. You are 100% owner of the words and music of all songs that we produce for you.