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- This topic has 6 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 12 years ago by alicehive.
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November 15, 2012 at 9:07 pm #7585alicehiveParticipant
Anyone got tips on good books, podcasts, websites etc. relevant for us (aspiring) library composers? I’m trying to get more into the (library) composing work and don’t know where to start.
November 17, 2012 at 11:14 pm #7601Mark PetrieGuestHi Alice,
First place to look is here! Explore the Newbie info, Composer Corner (cue tips, composer interviews).
I haven’t found any books dedicated just to the library music business, but interviews with composers can be a goldmine of advice (they have been for me).
In case no one else has time to chime in, here’s something for you to get started on:
The business consists of different types of libraries:
royalty free and needle drop (one off) licensing websites
– usually non-exclusive, although some are exclusive. Prices range from $8 per track (low ball – bad!) to $100+ per track. You usually get 40%-50% of the sale. Some composers make a living just from these libraries, through sheer volume of sales.
boutique licensing companies, which include:
– composer owned/run TV catalogs – These can be non-exclusive or exclusive. If exclusive, they ‘should’ pay a small fee per track ($80-$150 per track) or a reversion clause (you can take your music back if the sales aren’t great). Focus is usually on performance royalties from music airing on TV
–trailer music companies (who charge big fees, if you can get into that highly competitive, quality driven end of the business). Most of them don’t pay upfront, but share the license fees (around 50%). Some, however, do buy-outs like the major libraries (pay you well upfront and don’t share licensing).
major libraries (often owned by multinational labels like Warner and Universal)
– usually nice upfront fees ($600-$1000 per track) for buy-out deals. The performance royalties can be great too, as these big libraries have the best worldwide distribution networks.
If you’re just starting out, the key is to write every day. Write when you don’t have to. Aim to finish at least two tracks (1:00-2:00) a week or more. You’ll get better each time you produce a track, both musically and production wise. Production quality is at least as important as the music. You’ll need at least 100 well produced tracks in the hands of a good library before you start seeing significant income (goes for either fee based sites or royalties based libraries). It depends on a few things (your production quality, the libraries you work with, your genres) but you’ll probably need at least 500 tracks in the hands of successful libraries before you can start considering giving up your day job. At 1000 tracks it’s quite possible, at 1500 you should be making a good living.
From what I’ve seen, the best selling genres are upbeat modern pop rock (think Coldplay, U2, Katy Perry), well produced orchestral tension and epic heroic. Lots of other genres sell well too – light acoustic, atmospheric horror, quirky orchestral, techno, jazz – but overall the ones I mentioned seem to be the most successful. Do your own research – watch some random reality shows, check out the best selling tracks on royalty free sites (they’ll often tell you on the homepage).
A smart composer ‘diversifies’ their library income streams (on top of any custom scoring projects) – maybe you’l start with the royalty free sites, but don’t forget to include performance royalties and even license fees as you progress in your career.
Something to be aware of: the business is in a bit of a flux at the moment. The bigger libraries are pushing for audio recognition to be the way music usage is recorded. This will be a big blow to the non-exclusive (re-titling) business model. The TV networks are also said to be getting wary of re-titled tracks (it can get messy when the same track is submitted by multiple libraries). So, with all that in mind, you might want to be careful about how much of your music goes to non-exclusive libraries.
November 18, 2012 at 5:26 am #7605MichaelLParticipant+++++1
Well said Mark. Great road map!
From what I’ve seen, the best selling genres are upbeat modern pop rock (think Coldplay, U2, Katy Perry), well produced orchestral tension and epic heroic. Lots of other genres sell well too – light acoustic, atmospheric horror, quirky orchestral, techno, jazz – but overall the ones I mentioned seem to be the most successful
But….I would add that some music does have a “best when used ” by date on it. Cues that are based on current trends, like Coldplay, U2 and Katy Perry will have their day in the sun, but five or ten years from now perhaps not so much.
November 18, 2012 at 7:11 am #7608Art MunsonKeymasterThanks Mark, great post and I just put a link to it in the “Newbie Info”.
November 18, 2012 at 8:27 am #7609mylesthebakerMemberNice one Mark! Sound and sage advice!
November 18, 2012 at 10:10 am #7610Dan PGuestJust as Mark has said we sell tracks in the pop rock and acoustic veign
often.I sat around one day and counted the genre’s I heard on everything TV
and came up with the same result!! Sales prove it!
November 22, 2012 at 12:22 am #7640alicehiveGuestHey Mark, many thanks for this detailed answer!
I am not a total newbie anymore (I’ve started publishing in royalty free libraries a few months ago but I am totally new to non-royalty free libraries) but I think this might help a lot of people just starting out!
Also, thanks to everybody else who replied.
Would you say that 1:00 – 2:00 is the ideal track length?
BTW, I found one great book that helped me a lot with all the legal terms “6 Steps to Songwriting Success: The Comprehensive Guide to Writing and Marketing Hit Songs” by Jason Blume.
Alice
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