Carl Nielsen's works in the Public Domain
Having died in 1931, all of Carl Nielsen's work should be in the Public Domain, yes?
Having died in 1931, all of Carl Nielsen's work should be in the Public Domain, yes?
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1923 is another "magic" date, everything published before that seems to be in the public domain.
In reply to 1923 is another "magic" date… by Jojo-Schmitz
1923 is the date that the US changed is copyright laws to resemble international law. Everything published before 1923 is Public domain in the US with a few exceptions. In other countries it depends upon when the composer and lyricist died and 1923 doesn't matter. If the composer and lyricist have been dead 70 years, the score is public domain regardless of the publication date. An example of an exception is Respighi, his wife renewed all of his copyrights and his music is still not in the public domain for the most part.
These are generalizations and IANAL.
In reply to 1923 is the date that the US… by mike320
OK, so, synopsizing:
Unless someone (with the right to do so) renewed the copyright in the jurisdiction in question (and then it depends, of course, on when they did so):
In the U.S.: if the work was published before 1923 (and copyright not renewed thereafter, I presume), then it doesn't matter when the composer died, it is PD;
In Europe (at least) and in the U.S. after 1923, (again if the copyright wasn't renewed beforehand), it's "death plus 70."
What about a work that's "in its 70 year period": can any rightful heir and/or the publisher renew the copyright, even if the composer didn't expressly provide for such in their will?
And of course, if in doubt for a specific work, do "due diligence" to try to find out.
Knowing you're NAL,
DLG
OK, here's another wrinkle: the work I'm considering transcribing is Nielsen's "Wind Quintet" (1922, according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Nielsen#Concertos, which in turn cites http://www.carlnielsen.dk/bio/#biography/art-and-consciousness.php); the edition I'm working from states "Copyright 1923-1951 by [publisher] Wilhelm Hansen." PD or not PD? If the work is PD but the printing is not, is it sufficient to simply cite the edition in my MuseScore transcription?
In reply to OK, here's another wrinkle:… by OlyDLG
IMSLP reports that it is still under copyright in some countries, but does not specify which ones. If I were in charge of musescore.com trying to stay out of trouble I wouldn't allow you to post it, but I'm not.
In reply to IMSLP reports that it is… by mike320
IMSLP?
In reply to IMSLP? by OlyDLG
https://imslp.org/wiki/Wind_Quintet%2C_Op.43_(Nielsen%2C_Carl) is the page for Nielsen's quitet. If you try to download it there is a message that there is no guarantee it's not in the public domain in your country (it's a generic message) and tells me that somewhere it's still under copyright. This generally means it is in the public domain in the US and EU, but I won't promise this to be the case. Their messages normally tell you if it's not PD in the US or EU.
In reply to IMSLP? by OlyDLG
https://imslp.org/wiki/Main_Page
In reply to OK, here's another wrinkle:… by OlyDLG
Ask questions here:
https://www.musicsales.com/brands/
http://www.musicsalesclassical.com/companies/editionwilhelmhansen
https://www.musicsales.com/contact-us/
In reply to Ask questions here: https:/… by Ziya Mete Demircan
This begs the question I've been trying to decide whether to ask here or on Quora:
If one asks a publisher if a work is in the public domain or not, are they legally obliged to: a) answer; b) answer truthfully?
In reply to This begs the question I've… by OlyDLG
a) no
b) as much obliged as any other company when writing stuff