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You can listen to the song on the radio if you wanted. Point being that the artist still get revenue from that.
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Because it is being used on a public broadcast. The reason there's no need to charge people for listening to songs on CDs is because they're (generally) just for personal use.
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Being an artist is creative profession. If you choose to go down that road you know it can take years to make a few pennies. And in this day and age you also know the big bad record companies only want to make money off you. That's why most artists have a regular job to support their hobby until their hobby becomes their job.
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I thought that you thought artists were paid too much and even the little artists should be able to fund tours and stuff.
In fact, most artists have a regular job because their music doesn't have commercial potential. Some of these are genuine artists, which is why their stuff doesn't have commercial potential. Some of these are just philistines who are just caught up in youth culture and actually can't compose or play a note, which is why their stuff has no commercial potential (although looking at popular music, that is the sort of stuff with commerical potential). It is only the former that may feel that a record deal wouldn't benefit them much and would thus find another way to make money or would make money by playing in bars and by teaching.
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The problem I have with the way things currently go is that music, right now, is an infinite money resource that's way out of proportion. If you want to sell your song on iTunes for a dollar that's fine. The problem I have is the money that is made of radio airtime and airtime at events and such. You're charging people money because they are (involuntarily) listening to something they don't even own. Why can't music be treated as any other medium?
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Because of copyright laws, broadcasters are charged for the use of
any intellectual property protected by copyright (unless Fair Use can be applied), not just music.
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And on the note of illegal downloading, I pay 14 cents authors compensation PER empty CD (60 cents for a DVD) because I MIGHT copy music on them. That is some major bullshit.
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I am not an advocate of the blank tape levy. This is one thing which I agree is ridiculous, but I don't think that any or much of the money goes to musicians. In fact, it is worth noting that the record industry is opposed to the levy.