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AFTRA and AFM Alert Members to SiriusXM’s Anti-Artist Licensing Offer

Posted October 27, 2011

Los Angeles and New York (Oct. 27, 2011) — The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) and the American Federation of Musicians (AFM) alerted members of their respective unions about SiriusXM’s “direct license” deal, which would set up independent labels to pay a performer’s share to the copyright owner – the independent record label – rather than the performer.

Since the beginning of satellite radio, Sirius and XM broadcast music under the statutory license established by Congress, and pay the required royalties to SoundExchange. SoundExchange pays half of those royalties directly to artists (45%) and to the AFM/AFTRA Fund for distribution to session performers (5%) and half to the record labels.  Artists – whether featured royalty artists or session singers or players, benefit from this system because performers get the 50% share Congress allocated to them directly and without recoupment. Artists and labels both benefit from SoundExchange's transparent operations, low administrative costs, vigorous efforts to set fair license rates for music, and responsiveness to artist and label concerns. SoundExchange is governed by a Board composed equally of label and artist representatives, including the unions.

SiriusXM is seeking to undo all that, and lower the rates for music on the backs of artists and musicians. “SiriusXM wants to bypass SoundExchange and pay the artists' and musicians' share to the label,” explains AFM President Ray Hair. “That move would send all 100% of the license fee to the label, cutting direct payment to performers right out of the equation.”

“The race by SiriusXM and independent record labels to grab performer copyright royalties hurts the music industry,” continues Hair, “it erodes the value of music industry-wide, where no one — artists, musicians, or record companies—can earn a fair living creating and investing in the music everyone wants to hear.”

AFTRA National Executive Director Kim Roberts Hedgpeth said, “This move is blatantly anti-artist and anti-musician. The statutory license established by Congress and the system administered by SoundExchange ensures transparency, efficiency, accountability – and most important – direct, non-recoupable payment to artists of their fair share of royalties for SiriusXM’s use of their music.”

Hair and Hedgpeth also called on members to “let your labels know that you believe they should support the long-term value of music by refusing the SiriusXM offer and insisting on the statutory license administered by SoundExchange.”

About AFTRA
American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, AFL-CIO, are the people who entertain and inform America. In 32 Locals across the country, AFTRA members work as actors, broadcasters, singers, dancers, announcers, hosts, comedians, disc jockeys, and other performers across the media industries including television, radio, cable, sound recordings, music videos, commercials, audio books, non-broadcast industrials, interactive games, the Internet and other digital media. The 70,000 professional performers, broadcasters, and recording artists of AFTRA are working together to protect and improve their jobs, lives, and communities in the 21st century. From new art forms to new technology, AFTRA members embrace change in their work and craft to enhance American culture and society. Visit AFTRA online at http://www.aftra.com, and follow AFTRA on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/aftrafanpage and Twitter at http://twitter.com/aftra.

About the AFM
Founded in 1896, the American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada (AFM), AFL-CIO, is the largest organization in the world dedicated to representing the interests of professional musicians. With more than 90,000 members, the AFM represents all types of professional musicians, including those who record music for sound recordings, film scores, videogames, radio, television and commercial announcements, as well as perform music of every genre in every sort of venue from small jazz clubs to symphony orchestra halls to major stadiums. Whether negotiating fair agreements, protecting ownership of recorded music, securing benefits such as health care and pension, or lobbying legislators, the AFM is committed to raising industry standards and placing the professional musician in the foreground of the cultural landscape. For more information, visit the Web site at www.afm.org, and follow the AFM on Twitter http://twitter.com/musiciansunion and Facebook http://www.facebook.com/afm.org.

Media contacts:
AFTRA, Christopher de Haan, 323.634.6203, cdehaan@aftra.com
AFM, Honore Stockley, 315.422.4488 x104, honore@afm.org

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