Home › Forums › General Questions › Alt versions on Tunesat
- This topic has 14 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated 4 years, 6 months ago by Art Munson.
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LauriKoivistoParticipant
Hi, if I have full version of a piece on Tunesat, would you recommend putting all the alt versions there aswell? There’s not usually any new stuff on those versions, just exported different parts of the full versions.
Thanks,
LauriComposer Of NotesParticipantIt’s probably not necessary, but if you’re allowed to upload that much, then you should. I mean only if it doesn’t cost more. I thought it was by the track, so putting up alts would cost too much, most would upload more works.
Art MunsonKeymasterif I have full version of a piece on Tunesat, would you recommend putting all the alt versions there aswell?
I generally do as a full, bed and DnB would have different digital fingerprints.
BrianMcGraveyParticipantI still have the free tunesat account and lately I’ve been doing all of the versions within 1 file. So: main, bed, narrative etc. all as part of the same file. Then if there is a detection I just listen for which version it was. Usually it is no problem to fit in 3-4 edits with tunesat’s allotted file size.
Art MunsonKeymasterlately I’ve been doing all of the versions within 1 file. So: main, bed, narrative etc
Interesting idea.
RM90ParticipantDoes anyone know if there is an online equivalent to tunesat? Something that detects online use without using Content ID?
UpFromTheSkiesParticipant2nd on jamming all versions into one file. Much more cost effective!
SasterNGuestI tried this just a couple of days ago but now I don´t get any detections anymore.
Now I don´t know if i don´t HAVE any detections or if it doesn´t work because I use all alternative mixes in one track (which makes the track up to 10min long).
Anyone experienced the same issue?Art MunsonKeymasterNow I don´t know if i don´t HAVE any detections or if it doesn´t work because I use all alternative mixes in one track (which makes the track up to 10min long).
I would think all mixes in one file would create a different digital fingerprint than one mix in a file. Just a guess as I have never tried it.
StevenOBrienParticipant2nd on jamming all versions into one file. Much more cost effective
I wonder if you could jam every single track in your catalogue into one giant file. 🙂
I would think all mixes in one file would create a different digital fingerprint than one mix in a file. Just a guess as I have never tried it.
I’d assume they split the file up into tiny sections and fingerprint those, because you have to be able to detect partial uses
SasterNGuestYes I agree, sometimes only 7 seconds of a song get used. So what would be the difference between a 2min or a 10min “medley track” with all alternative mixes for being detected by Tunesat?
But still it is not working. Usually I have 1-3 detections a day. Since I made “medley tracks” I haven´t received one single detections (5 days went by since then).
DavidGuestHi!
What kind of rights does one give up for having Tunesat find their music and get retrieving payments due? Thanks so muchDavidGuestHey Brian,
The difference between “Bed” and “Narrative” please, especially as would apply to a full song with words and music? Thanks, Love this place.BrianMcGraveyParticipantThe difference between a “Bed” and “Narrative” version is basically that the “Bed” has less elements than the narrative. Generally a narrative track doesn’t have the melody. So if it is a song with vocals, the narrative version might just be the same thing with vocals muted. A Bed version might just have only the chord progression and bare bones – no excessive instrument fills, no solos, no counter melody etc.
Art MunsonKeymasterWhat kind of rights does one give up for having Tunesat find their music and get retrieving payments due?
You don’t give up any rights. Tunesat only detects use, it does NOT collect payments.
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