Set Chopin Free: A Kickstarter to Campaign to Put 245 Chopin Pieces Into the Public Domain

“It is 164 years after Chopin’s death. His music is well into the pub­lic domain, yet most peo­ple con­sume it as if it were still copy­right­ed: from CDs, iTunes, or Youtube videos (many of which are copy­right­ed). We think Chopin deserves bet­ter.” That’s how Musopen.org frames its new Kick­starter cam­paign called Set Chopin Free. If the cam­paign reach­es its goal of rais­ing $75,000 (it’s already at $34,748), Musopen will work with tal­ent­ed musi­cians to “pre­serve indef­i­nite­ly and with­out ques­tion every­thing Chopin cre­at­ed.” They will record per­for­mances of 245 Chopin pieces in both 1080p video and 24 bit 192kHz audio, and then release them all into the pub­lic domain. Sounds like some­thing our read­ers can get behind. If you con­tribute to this cam­paign, you can get some pret­ty nice-look­ing gifts, while mak­ing your own gift to the cul­tur­al com­mons. Learn more about the Set Chopin Free cam­paign here. And, of course, we’ll let you know when this project is com­plete and the pub­lic domain record­ings are online.

Note: If you want to savor the fruits of anoth­er Kick­starter cam­paign, please vis­it our pre­vi­ous post: The Open Gold­berg Vari­a­tions: J.S. Bach’s Mas­ter­piece Free to Down­load

via Boing­Bo­ing

Relat­ed Con­tent:

The Genius of J.S. Bach’s “Crab Canon” Visu­al­ized on a Möbius Strip

A Big Bach Down­load: All of Bach’s Organ Works for Free

Glenn Gould Explains the Genius of Johann Sebas­t­ian Bach (1962)

 


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  • Hanoch says:

    I am hav­ing trou­ble under­stand­ing this. Has­n’t Chopin’s music already been “preserve[d] indef­i­nite­ly and with­out ques­tion”? Also, a major rea­son peo­ple buy copy­right­ed record­ings is because of a pref­er­ence for a par­tic­u­lar per­former or per­for­mance. Why con­tribute to a record­ing project before know­ing the qual­i­ty of the per­for­mances?

    • David Meek says:

      His music — as in the orig­i­nal com­po­si­tions — are unques­tion­ably pre­served. And there are some record­ings avail­able in the pub­lic domain. The idea here is to cre­ate a sin­gle mas­ter col­lec­tion of com­plete­ly free record­ings that will be known to have no rights issues from the first day they are com­plet­ed. Yes, some peo­ple will still choose to pur­chase oth­er select­ed record­ings for spe­cif­ic per­for­mances, but giv­en the hor­ri­ble ongo­ing degra­da­tion of pub­lic domain rights (in favor of near-infi­nite cor­po­rate copy­right) both here in the US and around the world, I applaud this effort.

  • Mike says:

    For once I agree with Hanoch. Chopin’s com­po­si­tions are out of copy­right and there is a pletho­ra of free record­ed mate­r­i­al avail­able online and through libraries. There’s noth­ing evil about pay­ing roy­al­ties to musi­cians, or the orches­tras that hire them, for the plea­sure of hear­ing a great per­for­mance. And there’s noth­ing wrong with hav­ing a sys­tem that gives musi­cians a chance of liv­ing a mid­dle-class life.

    • Hanoch says:

      Only once?

    • David Meek says:

      Just for reference/relevance, I trained as a musi­cian before chang­ing pro­fes­sions. Many of my friends end­ed up stay­ing in music, and work in orches­tras or in relat­ed fields. So I am entire­ly sym­pa­thet­ic to the idea that musi­cians should be able to sur­vive & make a liv­ing, espe­cial­ly in the try­ing times for clas­si­cal music of today (major orches­tra strikes, shut downs, etc.).nnnThat does not change the impor­tance or val­ue of what this Kick­starter is attempt­ing to do — I am not, nor do I believe are they, encour­ag­ing peo­ple to aban­don the sup­port of pro­fes­sion­al musi­cians. Instead, they are attempt­ing to address a major flaw in our cur­rent sys­tem: peo­ple who want to use cre­ative works in their own projects, but do so legal­ly and with the prop­er respect to the orig­i­nal cre­ator *and* the performer(s).nnnAs I men­tioned before, the near-per­pet­u­al copy­right world we are liv­ing in is mak­ing this incred­i­bly dif­fi­cult: find­ing eas­i­ly acces­si­ble, high-qual­i­ty (both in per­for­mance and in record­ing) sources that will not result in a DMCA take­down once you have pro­duced your own deriv­a­tive work is increas­ing­ly a prob­lem. nnnnHav­ing a sin­gle source of known qual­i­ty that also has a known legal sta­tus is exact­ly what con­tent cre­ators des­per­ate­ly need. That oth­ers may also use it for their own plea­sure is a sec­ondary bonus — but I think the real core here is get­ting us out from under the per­pet­u­al copy­right shad­ow of these huge mega-cor­po­ra­tions that keep push­ing back when our com­mon her­itage will final­ly return to us, free and clear.

      • Mike says:

        Hi David,nI guess it real­ly comes down to what you mean in the sec­ond para­graph by “prop­er respect.” To me, prop­er respect begins with a clear recog­ni­tion of the fun­da­men­tal need of the cre­ator (and in the case of a con­tem­po­rary Chopin record­ing the term would apply not just to the long-dead com­pos­er, but also to the per­former) to live a life out­side of pover­ty. If you’re try­ing to build a sys­tem that wel­comes more and more skilled peo­ple into an inter­na­tion­al fra­ter­ni­ty of unpaid ama­teurs, you may want to re-exam­ine your def­i­n­i­tion of the word “respect.”

        • David Meek says:

          I think this is threat­en­ing to turn into a descend­ing loop of mad­ness, so I’ll try to make this spe­cif­ic. I think each of us is address­ing this from a fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fer­ent van­tage point: you are pri­mar­i­ly focused on the poten­tial impact this will have on cur­rent and future per­form­ers, and I am pri­mar­i­ly focused on what this will give to cur­rent and future cre­ative devel­op­ers. How­ev­er, I do not believe the pur­pose or out­come of a suc­cess­ful KS project will be to dis­cour­age peo­ple from arts patron­age — if any­thing, the more peo­ple who have ready access to high-qual­i­ty mate­ri­als would tend to increase the over­all audi­ence base rather than sup­press it. Peo­ple need to get that ini­tial expo­sure, and resources like this are a great gateway.nnnnBottom line: I want to see audi­ences grow, and hav­ing a resource like this — regard­less of if it serves YouTube cre­ators or curi­ous clas­si­cal music novices — seems like a win-win.

        • David Meek says:

          I think this is threat­en­ing to turn into a descend­ing loop of mad­ness, so I’ll try to make this spe­cif­ic. I think each of us is address­ing this from a fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fer­ent van­tage point: you are pri­mar­i­ly focused on the poten­tial impact this will have on cur­rent and future per­form­ers, and I am pri­mar­i­ly focused on what this will give to cur­rent and future cre­ative devel­op­ers. How­ev­er, I do not believe the pur­pose or out­come of a suc­cess­ful KS project will be to dis­cour­age peo­ple from arts patron­age — if any­thing, the more peo­ple who have ready access to high-qual­i­ty mate­ri­als would tend to increase the over­all audi­ence base rather than sup­press it. Peo­ple need to get that ini­tial expo­sure, and resources like this are a great gateway.nnnnBottom line: I want to see audi­ences grow, and hav­ing a resource like this — regard­less of if it serves YouTube cre­ators or curi­ous clas­si­cal music novices — seems like a win-win.

  • Sean Hennessy-Brose says:

    I total­ly don’t under­stand this. “It is 164 years after Chopin’s death. His music is well into the pub­lic domain,

    ^ That is cor­rect. Chopin’s music is in the pub­lic domain. Why will your record­ing “pre­serve indef­i­nite­ly and with­out ques­tion every­thing Chopin cre­at­ed.”? If his music is in the pub­lic domain, the pub­lish­ing rights are already “pre­served indef­i­nite­ly and with­out ques­tion.”

    Peo­ple have copy­right­ed their mechan­i­cal rights to their per­for­mances of Chopin — this enables musi­cians who record his music to make income from so doing.

    It seems to me, this project fur­ther deval­ues Chopin and every per­former who plays his music — now and in per­pe­tu­ity. If you pro­vide these record­ings for free, peo­ple might believe it does­n’t have any finan­cial val­ue what­so­ev­er. More­over, peo­ple may well choose to exclu­sive­ly lis­ten to these free record­ings. Why pay to hear any­one else?

    I think you are a bunch of com­mu­nists — try liv­ing under Stal­in and see how that works out for you.

    By the way, I just released my record­ing of Chopin. Thanks to this cam­paign, the chances of me get­ting paid for my inter­pre­ta­tion are now sig­nif­i­cant­ly dimin­ished.

    It’s also incred­i­bly grandiose and arro­gant of you to think that your par­tic­u­lar record­ings will “pre­serve indef­i­nite­ly and with­out ques­tion every­thing Chopin cre­at­ed.” Who do you think you are? Chopin? What if your inter­pre­ta­tions of Chopin’s music are bad? You’re just an author­i­tar­i­an, ego­tis­ti­cal bunch of peo­ple who are try­ing to make Art objec­tive and gain exec­u­tive con­trol over Chopin’s music. As an inter­preter, I find your ideas both sanc­ti­mo­nious and sac­ri­le­gious.

    I hope this wrong­head­ed cam­paign fails. It will make things worse for every­one accept the peo­ple who are on the project.

    Regards,

    Sean Hen­nessy-Brose

    PS

    I just paid $5.00 a month to get access to 25,000,000 record­ings on Apple music. Do you real­ly think that it is too much to ask peo­ple to pay as lit­tle as I did to have access to thou­sands of great record­ings of Chopin? I don’t.

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