A federal appeals court just torched the landmark royalty bump that would have more than doubled what US concert promoters pay songwriters.
BMI's big rate court win gets tossed
BMI's big rate court win gets tossed
- BMI celebrated a 138% royalty hike back in 2023.
- Second Circuit judges called those rates unreasonable.
- Judge Louis Stanton's original ruling got vacated entirely.
- Rates had jumped from roughly 0.21% to 0.5%.
- Stanton stretched gross revenue beyond ticket face value.
- VIP packages and resale market sales were folded in.
- Appeals judges said that the expansion lacked any precedent.
- NACPA and Live Nation fought the broadened scope.
- Stanton leaned on SESAC and GMR rate data.
- Neither outfit operates under antitrust consent decrees.
- Previously negotiated BMI and ASCAP rates got undervalued.
- NACPA's collective bargaining muscle historically kept rates lower.
- Southern District of New York gets another crack.
- BMI hinted at pursuing further appellate review.
- Appeals court suggested rates could still climb significantly.
- NACPA called the reversal a win for live-music artists.
- BMI insists creators still deserve better compensation.
- The court acknowledged free-market rates belong in calculations.
- Potential new rates might land 50-80% above prior levels.
- Live Nation faces a separate DOJ antitrust trial soon.