Northern Soul Wrote:
you make the assumption that there is no money to be made in the public domain. if there was in fact no money in it, there would be nowhere you could go to hear the works of chopin, bach or any other classical music that is now in the public domain, or watch shakespeare. there would be no books you could read by homer, plato, or any other greek philosopher. public domain means that works are free from royalties, not necessarily that any performance, live or recorded, is free from any charge.
No, I don't make that assumption, and the classical comparison doesn't hold. Those are composers, and their work survives through the continual performances of their compostions. Also,
you're the one who said you wouldn't buy albums by any deceased artist which implies that you don't feel there's anyone who deserves any money from your purchase since the artist that created it is dead. Royalties, as you know, usually acount for a very small percentage of the price you pay.
Northern Soul Wrote:
major labels have about (iirc) a 10% success rate, meaning that any group or artist that is signed to a record or developmental deal ends up actually succeeding in making a career out of recordings, where those who dont succeed may make one or two albums, or even none at all. given that the major record labels all around the world sign hundreds of acts each year, and given a 10% success rate, i think im well within my reach in saying that there are thousands of bands who will never make any money from their copyrights.
This meaning wasn't clear in your original post, but of course I would agree that many artists will never make anything from royalties. But so what? How is this adversely affecting the marketplace? I still don't get the point of your statement that "for every Nick Drake there are a thousand Soft Machines". Are you implying that living artists that struggle to make money from their recordings are disproportionately losing their share in the market to dead artists that can't even reap the benefits of their sales? I just don't understand the point of your statement or how it reinforces any of the arguments you're trying to make.
Also, family estates that get royalties from a deceased artist's work are often the ones responsible for caring for and managing said work. You're suggesting they shouldn't get any money at all from the sale of that work?