Is there a way to check what your new cue sheets are in ASCAP?

Home Forums General Questions Is there a way to check what your new cue sheets are in ASCAP?

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
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  • #28245
    ChuckMott
    Participant

    For example, I can see that my number of cue sheets filed went up by a couple today, but I have no idea what they are or what shows? Is there a way to tell, and excuse me if this should be obvious…because really, it should be obvious right?

    #28246
    Michael Nickolas
    Participant

    No way to tell that I’ve found. There should be some sorting features (like sort by newest) but there isn’t.

    #28618
    David Rockower
    Guest

    I write them 1x a weekm to say.. exactly what you’ve said here

    #28620
    Music1234
    Participant

    The best way is to click dashboard, then cue sheets, and simply study the name of every “series”. That count goes up over time. If you do that every week your memory may be able to detect what you’ve seen before and also detect names of new shows and you can easily detect an increase in shows (cue sheets) you have music on. It gets a lot harder to do as the cue sheets and show count grow over time. It would be nice to be able to sort by “year filed”.

    At least ASCAP posts the information. Too bad BMI and SESAC do not.

    #28626
    Alan
    Participant

    I keep a spreadsheet that mirrors the series name and cue sheet count for each one. When I get about five or so new ones I will reconcile against my spreadsheet to see what is new. I also keep a sheet with all my Tunesat detections so I can compare and make sure cue sheets were filed. It’s a bit tedious but I have caught enough errors and had them fixed to make it worth the trouble

    #28654
    greg
    Guest

    I’ve noticed ascap now has a flag by “works” on the dashboard when new works are registered. Hopefully they will do the same with new cues. Very helpful in my opinion.

    #28655
    Composer Of Notes
    Participant

    I keep a spreadsheet of all my cue sheets, then I total each letter. So I have 12 series that begin with A for example. I count the number of cue sheets that begin with A. If it matches, I move to B.

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
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