I personally think it absolutely absurd to sell a PDF copy for the same price as a print product; there are no material costs involved.
If you really are traditional, stick with public domain. (GC, polyphony, organ)... but that is very dif with the NO.
I do not have any clients who purchase music with this in mind. Good music is not like kale... you buy it because you like it, and you want to taste it again and again.that I hope I'll never be asked to play again
i am NOT saying to use PD exclusively, otherwise I would be speaking against my own craft!
But to promote (purchase and perform) the music that is put out by OCP and the likes is truly contrary to the philosophy and theology of sacred music in an extremely high percentage. IMO, we should not participate in supporting their offerings.
I wish TLM choirs were more open to performing my (modern?!) works since they are almost exclusively in Latin, but the leaning toward Renaissance and Medieval music almost exclusively seems to come more from the need to remain safe with the known and approved body of RC work, and tend away from any possible air of modernism.
I kind of laugh about living composers who feel compelled to mimic the strict style and theory typical in the time of Palestrina et al.
So actually, I think we are probably mostly if not entirely in agreement.
It's one thing to master the old style, to mimic the form, but it's another to get stuck there and never find one's own voice... (theoretically speaking [pun intended])Though, seriously, there's good reason to master the old style (several good reasons, in fact. More beer and food required!).
It's one thing to master the old style, to mimic the form, but it's another to get stuck there and never find one's own voice
we definitely need to support the creativity of living composers of sacred choral music by including their works in the liturgy.
I wish TLM choirs were more open to performing my (modern?!) works since they are almost exclusively in Latin, but the leaning toward Renaissance and Medieval music almost exclusively seems to come more from the need to remain safe with the known and approved body of RC work, and tend away from any possible air of modernism.
No, the ends don't justify the means, so we cant do something morally illicit even if something "good" results from it.
I wish TLM choirs were more open to performing my (modern?!) works since they are almost exclusively in Latin, but the leaning toward Renaissance and Medieval music almost exclusively seems to come more from the need to remain safe with the known and approved body of RC work, and tend away from any possible air of modernism.
Very true, but is this copyright law a just law? An unjust law is no law at all. If that is the case, then one doesn’t need to follow it.
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