It's typical for video customers to often use licensed music - whether a soundtrack, background music, or sound effects - to complement their video projects.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Videos have to go hand in hand with your music, so that's why, ultimately, they should be created by the artist. And if they're not, it doesn't really add up to me.
We use a lot of source music on some shows and none on others.
You get royalties from certain songs that you do when you do background. It's according to the work that you put in.
Usually music is used to hide a film's problems.
Music video directors, who conceive, write and direct these works, enjoy no creative rights, receive no ongoing financial benefit from the sale of our work, and many times are not even credited.
I don't believe in an annual dose of film music for the sake of it being film music. If we program film music, it will be because there is a real artistic reason for doing so.
Music is everywhere - you consume it every day, everywhere you go. The content creator should be compensated. It's only fair.
Recorded music is more a marketing tool than a revenue source.
Movie music allows me to work with players as creatively as I can.
A music video is so different to doing a movie.