Disappearing Musescore on Website- How do I Get It Back?

• Jan 21, 2017 - 17:09

About a year ago, I uploaded a choir arrangement to Frozen's "Let It Go" in hopes of it being sung by my school. Unfortunately, the school chose another song, but they're willing to try again this year. In the great news of hearing this, I massively updated the arrangement, making the piano part more exciting and the choir part less excessive. I was ready to upload this update onto my account until I realized that it had disappeared! Disappointed, I told the choir director that the score had been taken down by copyright. But now that I've looked at the new Musescore website and looked through my profile, it says that I have five scores, but it only shows four, the one missing being the Frozen arrangement. I know that this isn't a private score problem because if I did accidentally make it private, then I would still see it but nobody else would.

You will see this on my profile ( //musescore.com/lora-coggins ), and if you click on my scores ( //musescore.com/lora-coggins/sheetmusic ), then you will see that there are only four scores on the website.

As of now, I'm quite confused. Is my score still on the website? If so, how do I get it back?


Comments

In reply to by Thomas

I see now. So, if I were to delete the score and upload my newer version with changes and a changed license, giving credit to the original owner, would that still be under copyright laws?

(My best guess would be that it probably would, since I still used a large percentage of the owner's original work, especially the piano part, so I'll have to show the changes in order to be approved. The only problem is that I can't upload pictures on this site for some reason, no matter how hard I try.)

In reply to by L. Coggins

In general, if you create an arrangement of someone else's work and wish to publish it (including posting it publicly on musescore.com), it isn't enough to just give credit - you need *permission* (which usually entails paying a royalty). You would need to consult the copyright owner to see what their policy is.

I do have one last question. Sometimes, on YouTube, I get copyright notices that seem to last forever and then suddenly disappear after a year or so. Can that sort of thing happen on this website? (I'm probably sure that it won't in this case since the original song is pretty popular, I used a lot of the original score from the Frozen music book that I have, and it's Disney. However, I am curious if other people have gotten into a copyright situation like I have and have eventually gotten off of that copyright situation.)

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