some good advice here. some not
entertainment attorney? like is that a default response? please tell me what that does for you? can no one make an agreement anymore without some attorney present? (jeez, i hope i'm not sounding anti-litigious
It's actually pretty good advice. No one here knows the
actual laws regarding each piece of music and using
something you aren't free to use can hold up the distribution
(or even festival showing) of your movie. So contacting the
right person regarding a legal matter give you the exact,
real, accurate info a filmmaker will need when it comes time
for distribution. Doing your own research is great, but at
some point contacting an attorney about this legal aspect
of a movie production can be an excellent choice.
harry fox, the ascap, bmi, or others are not the way to go. they are collection agencies. they don't have any means to see if the artists like the film or if you can get some sort of discount. they simply are in the collection business. absolutely try to contact the artist first.
While BMI and ASCAP do not have the means to see if an artist
likes the film, both have contact information of the music publisher.
They even have specific Film/TV departments that help a filmmaker
find what they are looking for. So then can be the way to go when
looking for music licenses.