Just curious if one of you fine folks could verify that the music found in the online PDFs of "The Caecilia" magazine and other such publications belong in the public domain.
Has there been any thought to attempting to expand the holdings of the Catholic Choirmaster, at least to the rolling copyright wall? There are holes in the Caecilia as well, but not to the same extent.
I believe the problem is that we don't have a comprehensive set of copies of all issues. I believe Richard was working on that a while ago, so he'd have the most up-to-date info on it.
It's something I wish I'd had time for back when I was an Academic™ with access to OhioLink. But there are still things I might be able to do, if I knew where we are on it.
If you are not planning to profit monetarily or resell the music, then you could use the music from the Caecilia collection, and I'm sure no one would kick up a big fuss. If you produce a program of the music, a liturgy guide, or something similar for your congregation, then I would give proper credit to the author and composer. To be sure, you need to go to the copyright office online and verify that no copyrights were renewed.
The content of The Caecilia is a mix; in the later years, the journal was published by the Society of Saint Cecilia (which was probably dissolved when the journal ended); before then, it was issued by the music publisher McLaughlin and Reilly; in the 1920s, it was published by the seminary at Mundelein. The texts in the journal were probably owned by those organizations. I haven't checked, but I doubt that those copyrights got renewed, so the texts are probably all PD.
Most of the music bears copyright notices for McLaughlin and Reilly. If the protection has not expired from the 95-year limit, it may be useful to search for copyright renewals and see who held the rights at the time of renewal: that was sometimes McLaughlin still, but in some cases, the rights were transferred to the author or an heir. McLaughlin's remaining rights, I believe, are now held by Summy-Birchard, but that publisher may be part of some bigger company now.
If the rights went to an heir, it's a tradeoff: private individuals may be good at responding to a permission request, but finding who owns the rights now may take some research. Big publishers have not been very responsive in my few attempts to get permissions: responses to requests took several months.
I have several boxes of the Catholic choirmaster that were donated to the CMAA for scanning and uploading. The project will be fairly expensive and we probably need to do a fundraiser to specifically raise funds to do this.
I note that a number of the earlier issues of the Caecilia (German and German-English) are available at archive.org. I haven't checked yet for Catholic Choirmaster. It would seem that such issues could be ported over at minimal expense.
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