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A great day for albums

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Pink Floyd has won a case, in the UK, preventing its record label EMI from distributing its songs individually, instead of as an entire album. The band objected to this practice, which it said undermined the integrity of their “seamless” albums. The judge said EMI was “not entitled to exploit recording by online distribution or by any other means other than the original album, without the consent of Pink Floyd”.

While this case turned on a contractual clause expressly prohibiting EMI from selling Pink Floyd’s songs “out of context”, New Zealand’s copyright law can give musicians (and other copyright holders) limited protection against “derogatory treatment” of their musical works outside of a contract (part of the “moral rights” of authors long recognised in civil law jurisdictions, but only since 1994 in New Zealand).

Under section 98 of the Copyright Act 1994, an author of music has the right (with various complex requirements and exceptions)  “not to have his or her work subjected to a derogatory treatment”. It is important to note that, where this section applies, it gives the right to the author, not the copyright owner who usually has all the rights under copyright law.

Derogatory treatment includes doing something “prejudicial to the honour or reputation of the author”.  What this actually means in practice is not always clear. In the case of a band, whose reputation might include concept albums portraying a high level of “interconnectedness” of songs, an argument could be made that breaking up the album, or rearranging it, or reducing a song to ring tone without permission, is a derogatory treatment. Similarly, using a musical work to accompany or promote a highly offensive movie could be derogatory treatment (one quirk is that moral rights extend to the “musical work” but not necessarily to an actual recording of it). In either case, the person using the work may be licensed to use it, but the author may still have a remedy for derogatory treatment. It would very much depend on the facts, taking into account the complex and incomplete coverage of moral rights.

One of the few New Zealand cases involving derogatory treatment is Radford v Hallensteins ([2009] DCR 907 and others). It involves a clothing chain that printed t-shirts showing an image of sculptor John Radford’s Western Park installation in Auckland. Radford has brought a claim against the clothing chain for copyright infringement, including derogatory treatment of his work. The case is yet to be heard, but the District Court refused to strike out the claim last year.


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