Kevin Brennan (Cardiff West) (Lab) I beg to move, That this House
has considered remuneration for songwriters and composers. Good
morning. It is always a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr
Hollobone. I should at the outset declare that I am a member of the
Ivors Academy, PRS for Music and the Musicians’ Union, and I chair
the all-party parliamentary group on music. Last night was quite
special because some of us, including the Secretary of State for
Digital,...Request free trial
(Cardiff West) (Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered remuneration for songwriters and
composers.
Good morning. It is always a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr
Hollobone. I should at the outset declare that I am a member of
the Ivors Academy, PRS for Music and the Musicians’ Union, and I
chair the all-party parliamentary group on music.
Last night was quite special because some of us, including the
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, were
invited to Abbey Road Studios in St John’s Wood for an event in
the famous Studio Two, where the Beatles recorded the vast
majority of their material that has ever been released. We were
treated to a wonderful performance by a young singer called
Olivia Dean, who is also a songwriter; she performed her song
“The Hardest Part” quite beautifully for us. I predict big things
for her in the next 12 months or so. It was a reminder of the
wonderful talent for songwriting and composing in this country,
and the great legacy we have.
I was fortunate recently to help host the Ivors Academy’s
composer week here in the House of Commons, when several
composers came to celebrate great British achievement in
composing. That great legacy is also a live one, with young
performers such as Olivia Dean. The legacy of Abbey Road itself
is not just the Beatles, but Pink Floyd and many other great
artists, including more recently Stormzy, Adele and Ed Sheeran.
But behind some of those great performers are often professional
songwriters. Amy Wadge, who lives quite close to my constituency
in south Wales, is behind some of Ed Sheeran’s biggest hits, as
she co-writes with him. We should remember not just the artists,
but the songwriters and composers.
Visiting Abbey Road last night reminded me that we should protect
the legacy of our great recording studios, including the Maida
Vale Studios, which the BBC is now selling off, and which there
is an opportunity to keep, as a going concern, as a recording
studio. It would be a loss to the country if the studio were sold
off for flats, rather than maintained as a recording studio.
This morning I want to talk about three things to do with
songwriters and composers, and give the Minister an opportunity
to respond. First, the Select Committee on Digital, Culture,
Media and Sport wrote a groundbreaking report on the economics of
music streaming, which contained a series of recommendations in
relation to songwriters and composers, as well as to performers.
I know the Minister has taken a close interest in that inquiry,
particularly in relation to some work going on in the
Intellectual Property Office. I am glad to see him back in his
role; we discussed a lot of these matters when I introduced my
private Member’s Bill, the Copyright (Rights and Remuneration
of musicians Etc.) Bill,
into the House of Commons a year ago. He made several commitments
at that stage that I hope he might revisit a little today.
Secondly, I will talk about composer buyouts and the growing
problem they present to our songwriters and composers, and the
threat to the future pipeline of songwriters and composers.
The third point I will discuss—to give the Minister a heads-up—is
artificial intelligence and the implications of the data mining
of musical works.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I commend the hon. Gentleman; he is a dear friend of mine, and a
dear friend of many. On the Back Benches we like his wit—we will
probably get some of his wit today at Prime Minister’s Question
Time. It is a delight to hear him talk with passion on a subject
that means so much to him. Does he agree that the unfair
disadvantage for the songwriters and composers who have made
their breakthrough via a viral song on a social media streaming
platform, only to receive a minimal payment, must be addressed by
Government? The industry has had more than enough time to fix it,
and it has refused to do so. I believe there is clearly a
legislative requirement—the broken record will not be fixed.
I completely agree with the hon. Gentleman. I know that he is a
bit of a musician himself. I am not going to go into lengthy
detail about that issue this morning. However, suffice to say,
the recent Competition and Markets Authority report into
competition issues in the music industry, and, in particular,
into the cross ownership of both publishing and recording rights
of the major record companies, did not decide to proceed to a
full market investigation. In a way, it threw the ball back to
the Government, by saying that it
“is not to say that we think the market gets a ‘clean bill of
health’ or cannot be improved further… We think it is a matter
for the Government and policymakers to determine whether the
current split is appropriate and fair, and to explore whether
wider policy interventions are required, for example those
relating to the copyright framework and how music streaming
licensing rates are set.”
I note that in France, for example, a form of equitable
remuneration—to use the technical term—which is a guaranteed
payment when music is streamed, was successfully introduced
recently. The research into equitable remuneration from the
Intellectual Property Office research programme is over three
months late already. Will the Minister update us on what is
happening in those groups that were set up in the Intellectual
Property Office? What is happening in relation to the
research?
I also put this to the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture,
Media and Sport, yesterday at the DCMS Committee, but can the
Minister take a closer interest and put some ministerial input
into driving that work further forward and bringing it to a
conclusion? There has been some turmoil and changes in Government
since we discussed this a year ago, but I know he had hoped it
would have been done by last September, and for a number of
reasons—not entirely his fault, and because the work is
complex—the work is still incomplete. Some ministerial input is
what I am calling for.
When we discussed this a year ago, the preference was that the
industry should come to an agreement. That is what it has done in
France to improve remuneration for songwriters and performers. If
the industry did not do that, the Government were prepared to
consider action. I remind the Minister of that, and ask him to
respond today as to where he and the Government stand now.
The CMA concluded that it does not have the power to determine
whether the current split is appropriate and fair. In the United
States, things are done differently—it has a copyright court that
determines those things. The judge there described some of the
assumptions that the Competition and Markets Authority made about
the problems that might be caused if the split was changed, and
how that might disadvantage songwriters or other artists, as
“heroic” assumptions. I was surprised to see that in the CMA
report. But if the CMA does not have the power to do it, and it
is instead a policy issue for the Government to resolve, what
avenues are the Government pursuing and exploring to resolve the
issue?
The second point I will mention is the issue of buy-outs.
Parliament has determined, over many decades, that songwriters
and composers should be entitled to a royalty when their work is
performed or recorded. It did so because it recognises that the
creative act involves the creation of intellectual property. That
is extremely important, and many people do not understand that it
is a key source of income for songwriters and composers.
This is nothing new; throughout history, people have wanted to
get their hands on composers’ and songwriters’ money and get a
piece of the pie, whether it is Colonel Tom Parker with Elvis
Presley or whoever else. In recent years a particularly
pernicious practice has emerged among some media companies of
demanding up front, when they commission a piece of music—perhaps
for a TV series or film—that the composer or songwriter signs a
contract that waives their right to royalties, which they have a
right to for their lifetime and beyond. It was Parliament’s
intention that that should be the case.
Some might say, “Well, that’s their choice. They don’t have to
sign the contract. A contract is something entered into equally
by two parties,” but the power dynamic is weighted towards the
powerful media companies. Composers know that they will end up on
a blacklist of some sort if they do not agree to sign away some
or all of their rights. They are often prepared to do some of
that, but they are increasingly being asked to completely give up
their rights to royalties when they are commissioned. Some
composers got in touch with me before this debate and described
the practices of one particular media company called Moonbug.
When it commissions works from composers, it demands that they
give up 100% of their royalties.
The Government might say, “This is a private matter. It is a
contractual matter,” but there is room for Government leadership.
They should support a code of conduct for the industry to make
sure media companies are not routinely able to get away with this
pernicious practice, which is becoming more and more common.
The third thing I want to talk about is artificial intelligence
and the potential threat to our songwriters and composers from a
decision that the Government announced earlier in the year—I
understand they are now reviewing it. I have spoken to the
Minister about this privately, and I have expressed my concerns.
I know other Members have done so too, as have stakeholders in
the music industry.
(Neath) (Ind)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this very important
debate and on his superb leadership of the APPG on music. Does he
agree that the proposed text and data-mining exception to promote
AI would remove the need for a licence to reproduce copies of
original works, so would remove any opportunity for performers
and creators to be remunerated for their talent and work?
Furthermore, because there is not an opt-out for performers and
creators, it will have a severe detrimental effect on their
creative personality, because in the future it will be done by a
computer.
The hon. Lady has made part of my speech for me, so I thank her
for that. She emphasises the point that I wish to make. To be
clear, if the Government’s original position on this matter were
to be maintained, any tech company could freely data mine
creative output, including musical works, to produce, using
artificial intelligence, not an exact copy of that music but a
kind of facsimile, in order to commercially exploit it. The
composer would not have any ability to give permission for that
and rights holders would not be able to license it. It seemed
strange for a Conservative Government to trample over property
rights in that way. I hope it was a decision taken in some of the
turmoil that has been going on recently in government, and that
they will actively reconsider it.
I spoke to the Secretary of State at the Digital, Culture, Media
and Sport Committee yesterday, and she indicated that the matter
is under review. I pressed her on the Government’s likely
direction of travel and whether it would go back towards allowing
reasonable exemptions, perhaps for academic purposes, as long as
it really is for that reason and is negotiated properly with
rights holders and the industry, but not allowing free access for
people to exploit other people’s work and, in a sense, be able to
pickpocket their intellectual property, then reproduce it in a
slightly different format using artificial intelligence. The
implications of that for songwriters and composers and their
ability to make a living is quite considerable in future.
I hope the Minister can tell us a bit more about the review and
why the Government came to such a conclusion originally. I
understand why he might want to promote tech. We all want to see
innovation using technology, but it cannot be done at the expense
of people’s creative rights and intellectual property. When he
responds, perhaps he will tell us about the timeline for the
review and about who he is listening to on this subject, and
perhaps he can lean into what the direction of travel is.
11.16am
The Minister for Science, Research and Innovation ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Hollobone—in the warmth of your chairmanship in this cool room
this morning. I congratulate the hon. Member for Cardiff West
() on securing the debate and
on his ongoing work in this field. I welcome the chance to update
him on the progress that has been made and to re-emphasise the
message that I gave at the Dispatch Box several months ago before
the turmoil of the summer. I want to reiterate the commitment
made by my officials, the Government and me to get the issue
right and to strike the right balance and continue the pressure
that I know he welcomes in trying to secure that.
I am here as Minister for Science, Research and Innovation in the
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, and as
Minister with responsibility for the Intellectual Property
Office. I also co-chair the Office for AI with the Department for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. I am also here as a Member for
Parliament and a citizen of this country who is very cognisant
and aware, as the hon. Member for Cardiff West has highlighted,
of the role of music in our society and our economy. I am the
husband of a theatre director, Fiona Laird, who has composed her
own music. I have watched her go through the motions as a creator
and as a musical theatre director. She composed the music for her
recent Royal Shakespeare Company production of “The Merry Wives
of Windsor”. We have a friend, a digital entrepreneur in the
music scene, who uses the global streaming revolution to get a
foothold as a minor artist in this incredible global economy. I
therefore have some personal feel for the challenge, and I know
how strongly the industry respects the commitment of the hon.
Member for Cardiff West to try to get the balance right.
The strengths of the UK music industry are a major part of our
economy. It contributed £4 billion to our economy in 2021, and
probably more this year. A key component of that is exports.
British music brought £2.5 billion into the UK in 2021. It is
also a major force for soft power. Next week I will be in Japan
making a speech on global science soft power. I suspect the
Japanese associate the UK with the Beatles, Ed Sheeran and the
fabulous creative artists we saw celebrated in the Jubilee, as
well as with our science. They go together as global projections
of our values as a democracy and a creative powerhouse in the
world.
I absolutely share the hon. Member’s view that songwriters and
composers should enjoy a fair share of the value. The challenge
is to make sure we get a framework in the UK where that is
true—it is a lived experience and reality—without unilaterally
moving so hard or fast that we undermine the sector. We must try
to establish best practice, which fits with the wider work I am
doing on innovation and regulation. This country has an
opportunity to set the global standards in many of these sectors,
which could then, through our soft power, become international
standards. That is how we see this.
The principles of fairness and sustainability underpinned the
inquiry by the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee into
music streaming, which kicked off so much of this. I want to
reassure Members that those principles absolutely underpin the
Government’s approach. I will address the issues that the hon.
Member has raised and give him the update that he asks for. On
streaming, we kicked off a significant piece of work on data,
which the Intellectual Property Office has completed. The data
gives us a good grasp of what is going on, which is key to fair
remuneration. Too often, information that identifies songwriters
and composers, along with their works and owners, is incomplete,
inaccurate or missing entirely, which means that creators often
face delays in being paid, and some are not paid at all. That
predominantly affects not rock stars and superstars but the
smaller creators on modest incomes, who depend on that data for
their livelihoods.
That is why, since the DCMS Committee’s inquiry last year, the
IPO has established a working group on metadata, which we have
tasked with developing industry-led improvements. These are
complex issues and there is no silver bullet, as the hon.
Gentleman knows, but the working group has made real progress on
a good code of practice on metadata and a two-year roadmap for
industry to deliver tangible improvements through education and
technical solutions. That output is very close to completion.
Since returning to office a month ago, I have asked to see it, so
that I can ensure that it reflects the undertakings that I gave
to the hon. Gentleman and the House. Officials in the
Intellectual Property Office will share it with the music
industry more widely very early in the new year to seek final
agreement.
Similarly, the IPO has established a working group to develop a
code of practice on transparency. That code is also close to
completion, and we will be seeking wider industry agreement on
that early in the new year, too. I hope and believe that those
actions on data and transparency will achieve their aim: real
improvements in the fair remuneration of songwriters and
composers, and songwriters enjoying more timely and accurate data
payments as a result of the improvements in data. Those are key
elements of the package.
Let me turn to competition and the distribution of revenues.
However good the data is, many feel—the hon. Gentleman made this
point very well—that the share of streaming revenues that go to
songwriters and publishers, particularly the smaller creatives at
the lower end of the pecking order, as it were, is too low. It is
key that the remuneration is fair and internationally
competitive. Let me break those two points down. As the hon.
Gentleman said, the CMA published its final report on the market
for music streaming last week. The report was launched after the
DCMS Committee and the Government encouraged the CMA to look into
this and other claims.
We read the report carefully. As the hon. Gentleman said, it
found no suggestion that publishing revenues were being
deliberately suppressed by distorted or restricted competition.
The report also set out the fact that the overall share of
streaming revenues enjoyed by publishers and songwriters
increased from 8% in 2008 to 15% in 2021. At the same time, the
share enjoyed by the recorded music industry has remained steady.
It is true that the publishing share has declined slightly since
2017—from 17% to 15%—but during that time overall publishing
revenues paid out by the larger streaming services in the UK have
more than doubled. More and more money is being paid out to
songwriters and publishers from streaming, which is great.
Because songwriters typically enjoy the largest share of
publishing royalties—an average royalty rate of 84% in 2021—the
vast majority of the publishing share is going to
songwriters.
The key point, however, is whether streaming revenues are fairly
distributed within the ecosystem. There are still many who feel
justifiably that the devil is in the detail. They want to know
how that overall number is allocated, and think that we need to
do more to ensure that the allocation is fair. The question of
how revenues are distributed between artists, songwriters, record
labels, publishers and streaming platforms is complex, and we
have a responsibility to ensure that any arrangements work for
the industry as a whole. There is no perfect solution, but I
repeat that there is more that we can do, by working with the
industry, to get closer to something that is widely recognised as
fairer.
Record labels and publishers each play an important role in
supporting and investing in British artists and songwriters. We
do not want any unilateral or dramatic reapportionment to
undermine the UK sector, but we want to ensure that we do right
by the next generation of talent, which we require to feed the
whole sector. The Copyright Royalty Board in the US recently laid
down that song rights holders should receive around 15% of
streaming revenues, which is similar to what we have achieved in
the UK. Given that, and given the movement in France, which the
hon. Gentleman highlighted, it is interesting that there is a
global movement towards ensuring that this growing sector is
based on principles of fair remuneration.
I will come on to the changes to copyright law. The DCMS
Committee recommended several changes aimed at improving
remuneration, including a right to equitable remuneration for
streaming, a right to regain ownership of copyright, and a right
to renegotiate contracts; those are measures that the hon.
Gentleman brought forward in his private Member’s Bill. I made it
clear at the time that further consideration of those measures
was an active priority, and that remains the case. We have seen
some positive action from some in the music industry on
remuneration for creators. The three major record labels have
agreed to disregard unrecouped advances in older contracts, which
means that many artists are now being paid from streaming for the
first time. Several independent record labels have announced
minimum digital royalty rates in their contracts of 25% or more,
even for contracts agreed prior to streaming. There has been some
progress and these steps are welcome, but I appreciate that
creators want to see more substantial and wide-ranging action on
remuneration; that is why, in the coming months, we will be
actively considering the evidence from the research, as well as
the voluntary action taken by the industry, and weighing up our
approach on remuneration.
I will come on to a specific proposal that I am making to bring
all of this together, including looking at the text and
data-mining issue, which is my next point; it is causing real
concern for rights holders. As the hon. Member for Cardiff West
was kind enough to say, I was out of office when this reform was
announced. In the few short weeks I have been back, I have
already met with the DCMS Minister for the creative industries,
my hon. Friend the Member for Hornchurch and Upminster (), to highlight the fact that
we must get this right. Of course, the UK wants to be a leader in
AI—we are, and we want to continue building on that, but we must
not allow that support to undermine our creative industries. My
hon. Friend the Member for Hornchurch and Upminster absolutely
agrees with me, and we have established a small taskforce of
officials between the two Departments to ensure that we get this
right. Following that meeting and this debate, I propose to
convene a roundtable between DCMS and the Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy of the key voices across
the sector to look at the whole issue. It will look at the rate
of progress, the report from the Intellectual Property Office and
the CMA, and the AI piece to see if we can get a proper
settlement that everyone acknowledges would be fair and reflects
the principles that we have set out, which—I will repeat
again—are absolutely fundamental to our approach.
I believe deeply that, if we get this right, we can establish a
Government-supported but industry-led code of conduct that will
be respected around the world. It will improve and continue the
process by which the industry is improving and ensure that we
continue that momentum, so that it does not require private
Members’ Bills to keep nudging the industry and we have
leadership in setting the standards for fair remuneration that
are the envy of the world. As the co-chair of the Office for
Artificial Intelligence and Minister with responsibility for the
Intellectual Property Office on this issue, I will suggest that
my hon. Friend the Member for Hornchurch and Upminster and I
convene that roundtable; I will obviously be in touch with the
hon. Member for Cardiff West and the DCMS Committee.
In closing, with two minutes on the clock, I will highlight the
fact that we believe that there is an opportunity here. The
industry has shown willingness to move in the right direction.
The Government signal that our preference is not to legislate;
our preference is to encourage the industry to move in the right
direction but, if we must legislate to get this right, we reserve
that right. However, our preference remains to avoid that—not
least because we would like to get a quicker solution for the
benefit of all those in the industry.
I understand what the Minister asked, because we have not
discussed it previously, but I do not want the point about
composer buyouts to be lost in the discussion. I welcome what the
Minister said about convening a roundtable and his continued
commitment. We need a discussion at some point about the
implication of the increasing trend for composer buyouts.
I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for putting that on the
record; I will put it on the record that we will include that in
the roundtable discussion. I will pick up the detailed point that
he made and write to him on it, because that is part of the mix.
I hope that the House and the hon. Member for Cardiff West can
see that we are making progress, and I look forward to working
with him on this in the months ahead.
Question put and agreed to.
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