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Comments
Richard Berry and the song "Louie Louie" are an interesting example. He sold the rights for 750.00, at a time when his recording hadn't sold that well. The rest is history and of course it became a huge hit for many different artists and recordings. Wikipedia documents that he was able to regain unpaid royalties years after the fact because he'd retained BMI rights to the song, and he'd never been paid for them. From what I've read it took some effort even at that point.
History can have a dim memory though - nearly everyone has heard the song and they've probably heard the Kingsmen version, not Berry's. They K-men acknowledge that it was Berry's tune, but they recorded the song in 1963 and Berry had sold part of the publishing rights.
I will be glad to post one of Billy's song here as a sample to inspire others to purchase but only with Steve's permission. I don't wanna get sued or anything. (Just kidding).
Hey even the Beatles fuxxxed up when it came to rights and royalties didn't they?
Just ask the Jackson estate and Sony who own most of the good ones as I recall.
It's a tough industry, the music business, from what I hear.
BTW - Steve great job on ROA 1984 DVD that you guys produced. It is a one of a kind and it is priceless to have that preserved. Why would any one ever care at this point if it was distributed? Who's gonna buy it out in the world. Who's gonna care about that interesting event but some of us who went. As I see it...there's no potential revenue stream from that DVD. But I see a lot of fun in watching it.
Yeah, for a young person who was used to Black Sabbath and Pink Floyd on a daily basis, some of it was boring and corny. I felt as if I was going through rehab at first, (Maybe I was).
But then along would come a gem that changed something in me and inspired me to no end. Many of those I posted on the main page music player.
Has anyone forgotten John Messerschmidt's talents? I recently rediscovered them in transposing his old cassette to CD. It was him and a married couple. John wrote the songs and played and sang. They were called Theophilus and the album I am referring to was called Hope. Quality is not good (Master tape is needed to get this into best quality). But take a listen. Remember this? It was made in 1981. I think good music naturally follows a hot Christian movement.
Someone once told me how they didn't like a lot of the JN tunes, or much of the ministry music in the 70's. Hey, preferences in music are personal, no problem with that from my standpoint. But they made the comment "I can't forget some of those songs, even after all these years. I told them "in the music business, they call that a 'hit'...." : )
I am proud to say quite honestly there were some black belt songwriters came through the Way Ministry over the years. Billy Falcon. Dear Dave Bailey among them. Ted - you could drop Ted off the back of a truck in Alaska on a snowy night with no coat and say "Give me a chorus and 3 verses about bad rides" and he'd have it written before you could let him back in. He's a machine. PDSTRO - ? Forget it. Right there, a history of stuff written by Joe Fair, Ralph Graham and Paul Cuoco that would fill a song book or three. Dean Ellenwood, Mr. Prolific. "Christian Man" could be the Convention theme for the Democrats. Or the Republican's, it's as timely today as it was when he wrote it. Followed up by "Wake Up America", bookends to the last 35 years and both written within a few years of each other. Brian Bliss said it clearly for every grad of PFAL at the time - "We are sons of God with power, raise your head and say it loud". Cliff Adelman wrote the words "Sometimes I forget that I've been given my life's dream". Anyone ever feel like that about their lives? Without even cracking the book for Dan Moran, Mark Hagerling, Richie DiBartolo, and the dozens of others - there's a huge library of music that stands the test of time and could fit into any number of genre's and styles. Music may be one of the most lasting products of the Way's ministry over the years and it was produced by people of every locale, nationality and background and all from the same common ground.