I was wondering if someone had any ideas on this. Obviously I don't expect a definitive answer but it would be interesting to see what people had to say.
What do you think the copyright status is of scores where someone has transcribed an unpublished piece by ear? (eg some Cziffra, Volodos, Horowitz, possibly the Pletnev Nutcracker, though that may have been published officially, I don't know)
I am not the King of Copyright, nor a lawyer, nor even a resident of the UK, but I would tread very, very carefully here. I would think that transcriptions by ear of unpublished scores would have absolutely no valid copyright status unless it was expressly conferred on the transcriber by the copyright holder. After all, the score is simply a representation of the underlying music, and you'd need to have been given certain rights to that before creating and distributing any new representation of it in the first place. IOW, a copyright in your name would just be plagiarism. If works are in the public domain, that's different, but otherwise, I would think that
all rights to an unpublished work are reserved with whoever currently holds the copyright, and that includes publication, distribution, and even the right to perform it publicly.
Does the sheet music copyright reside with the aural transcriber, the performer, or the company who issued the recording? I would assume the first, but am not sure.
I ask because at a forthcoming performance (within the UK) I will have to give the event promoter the details of the pieces, publisher etc so that the information can be forwarded to the Performing Rights Society.
Thanks for any help.
Again, sheet music is an explicit representation of the 'real' music. Seems to me that neither the transcriber nor the performer could possibly register a copyright unless it was a new edition, for which you'd still need the permission of the author or his/her estate. As for a company that has produced a recording, unless the work is in the public domain, then it would seem to me that the company would have had to have secured a license from the copyright holder to record it in the first place, which means these are no longer 'unpublished' works.
Now I could certainly be wrong about all this, but at the very least, I think you need to find the current copyright holder, and I would also
strongly suggest talking to an entertainment lawyer and getting a written opinion before proceeding any further with this.
yd