Income split, royalties, etc.
- Biff Pocoroba
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Didn't Mother Love Bone sign a major deal before Wood died? No doubt Stone learned some lesssons from that negotiation. Not that anyone knew Pearl Jam would blow up like they did.
And no doubt that touring & merch is where the $ is at for bands these days, with digital music being what it is. I'm that is why we see so many products with the Pearl Jam name on their site & probably why we've seen more attention paid to stage presentation (lighting, props) the past few tours.
And no doubt that touring & merch is where the $ is at for bands these days, with digital music being what it is. I'm that is why we see so many products with the Pearl Jam name on their site & probably why we've seen more attention paid to stage presentation (lighting, props) the past few tours.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Birds in Hell wrote:LetMeSleep wrote:I'd be astonished if any of their bootlegs sell a tenth of that much, I'd expect a few hundred sales for shows of particular interest but barely any for random mid-tour shows. I think it's more of a vanity/goodwill project, I presume the digital/burn-to-order distribution method helps keep costs down enough to keep it going (though I may be wildly incorrect, of course).
Official Bootleg Series 2000-2001 (72 albums)..........1,600,000
Official Bootleg Series 2003 (73 albums)..................1,100,000
Official Bootleg Series 2005-2006 (100 albums)........800,000
Official Bootleg Series 2008-2012 (101 albums)........500,000
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- McParadigm
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Never underestimate publishing for artists who have big, remembered hits. Sting once admitted that he could live better than most middle class families off of the royalties for Every Breath alone, and Don McLean was direct enough to admit that he still earned hundreds of thousands of dollars a year off of American Pie as of early this century.Biff Pocoroba wrote:And no doubt that touring & merch is where the $ is at for bands these days, with digital music being what it is. I'm that is why we see so many products with the Pearl Jam name on their site & probably why we've seen more attention paid to stage presentation (lighting, props) the past few tours.
I remember an article about the mess that rich people wills can become noting that George Harrison's estate regularly claimed six million dollars a year in songwriting royalty income.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Don't have to be huge hits either. I remember Grace Slick saying in an interview White Rabit was paying her bills and that was less than 10 years ago. Not bad for something from 1967.
- Biff Pocoroba
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
In a similiar line of thinking what about covers performed on Pearl Jam bootlegs? Does Neil Young get something for every Rockin' in the Free World and Victoria Williams something for every Crazy Mary? Don't they have to pay something to get to perform them anyway?
No doubt there's well established legacy musicians living well off past success. I thinking more of newer acts from the past few years or bands just getting established as viable.
No doubt there's well established legacy musicians living well off past success. I thinking more of newer acts from the past few years or bands just getting established as viable.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
As far as i know you don't need any formal permission to cover a song but songwriters get royalties regardless of who is performing their songs.
- Farmer John
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Does Don McLean get paid everytime American Pie gets played on the radio? Or is most of that money coming from iTunes sales and what not?McParadigm wrote:Never underestimate publishing for artists who have big, remembered hits. Sting once admitted that he could live better than most middle class families off of the royalties for Every Breath alone, and Don McLean was direct enough to admit that he still earned hundreds of thousands of dollars a year off of American Pie as of early this century.Biff Pocoroba wrote:And no doubt that touring & merch is where the $ is at for bands these days, with digital music being what it is. I'm that is why we see so many products with the Pearl Jam name on their site & probably why we've seen more attention paid to stage presentation (lighting, props) the past few tours.
I remember an article about the mess that rich people wills can become noting that George Harrison's estate regularly claimed six million dollars a year in songwriting royalty income.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
I don't know what the future looks like for post-2000 acts that achieve popularity, simply because exposure and success are so much more compartmentalized now.Biff Pocoroba wrote:No doubt there's well established legacy musicians living well off past success. I thinking more of newer acts from the past few years or bands just getting established as viable.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars? I'm sure he meant from both avenues combined.Does Don McLean get paid everytime American Pie gets played on the radio? Or is most of that money coming from iTunes sales and what not?
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- Farmer John
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
But an artist does get paid every single time their song gets played on the radio?McParadigm wrote:I don't know what the future looks like for post-2000 acts that achieve popularity, simply because exposure and success are so much more compartmentalized now.Biff Pocoroba wrote:No doubt there's well established legacy musicians living well off past success. I thinking more of newer acts from the past few years or bands just getting established as viable.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars? I'm sure he meant from both avenues combined.Does Don McLean get paid everytime American Pie gets played on the radio? Or is most of that money coming from iTunes sales and what not?
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
As far as i know the writer does, the performer depends. Meaning it didn't hurt McLean's bank account that Madonna chose to cover that particular song.
- tragabigzanda
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Fri January 02, 2026 10:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
- bodysnatcher
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
"I Won't Back Down (from my final offer)"tragabigzanda wrote:This is true -- any venue that PJ plays is already paying to the performing rights organizations so that performers can cover a song at will (this is called a compulsory license). However, the band does need to get permission to sell the performance on the bootleg releases, which is why some covers have been left off occasionally.Mine wrote:As far as i know you don't need any formal permission to cover a song but songwriters get royalties regardless of who is performing their songs.
- Biff Pocoroba
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
I remember seeing the $6 million a year royalties figure each on the Beatles too around the time the Anthology set was released.McParadigm wrote:I remember an article about the mess that rich people wills can become noting that George Harrison's estate regularly claimed six million dollars a year in songwriting royalty income.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Biff Pocoroba wrote:I remember seeing the $6 million a year royalties figure each on the Beatles too around the time the Anthology set was released.McParadigm wrote:I remember an article about the mess that rich people wills can become noting that George Harrison's estate regularly claimed six million dollars a year in songwriting royalty income.

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- bodysnatcher
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
I wonder what Boom gets paid?
Probably just free room+board and food, as long as he supplies the weed
Probably just free room+board and food, as long as he supplies the weed
- CopperTom
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Brent Eliason and Brady Lahr both mentioned that is is more profitable than you think and is no where near "break-even." I think 5k across all formats is probably a fair estimate.Birds in Hell wrote:I'd be astonished if any of their bootlegs sell a tenth of that much, I'd expect a few hundred sales for shows of particular interest but barely any for random mid-tour shows. I think it's more of a vanity/goodwill project, I presume the digital/burn-to-order distribution method helps keep costs down enough to keep it going (though I may be wildly incorrect, of course).LetMeSleep wrote:And merch. The official bootlegs are a fantastic revenue idea. Play a show and get paid $1mil (minimum), get 5,000 fools to buy it for a tenner or more and bingo.Sgt. Crackpot wrote:The general consensus of what I've heard and read, is that for most musicians on a record contract there's fuck all money for the artist in record sales. The big money comes from touring.
emanon wrote:I think I either need to drink less to become more alert, or more so as not to care.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
I thought Michael Jackson owned the catalog?McParadigm wrote:Biff Pocoroba wrote:I remember seeing the $6 million a year royalties figure each on the Beatles too around the time the Anthology set was released.McParadigm wrote:I remember an article about the mess that rich people wills can become noting that George Harrison's estate regularly claimed six million dollars a year in songwriting royalty income.
emanon wrote:I think I either need to drink less to become more alert, or more so as not to care.
- McParadigm
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Addressed above. Total boot sales are over four million.Brent Eliason and Brady Lahr both mentioned that is is more profitable than you think and is no where near "break-even." I think 5k across all formats is probably a fair estimate.
1. Not the entire catalogI thought Michael Jackson owned the catalog
2. At least some of John's ownership would have automatically returned to his estate in England at some point in the 80's or 90's, thanks to some unusual intellectual property rights rules involving the deceased.
3. All four Beatles have solo careers
4. Paul and Ringo both toured during the year in question
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Yes, indeed, it certainly appears I was drastically underestimating how many people buy the shows.McParadigm wrote:Addressed above. Total boot sales are over four million.Brent Eliason and Brady Lahr both mentioned that is is more profitable than you think and is no where near "break-even." I think 5k across all formats is probably a fair estimate.
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Re: Income split, royalties, etc.
Considering the kind of merch insanity and live show comparisons that go on here, it makes sense.
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