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Re: using copyrighted audio during an experiment
Hi,
Check out this paper:
Plink: "Thin Slices" of Music
Author(s): Carol L. Krumhansl
Source: Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 27, No. 5
(June 2010), pp. 337-354
Published by: University of California Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/mp.2010.27.5.337 .
You might send a mail to Carol Krumhansl, perhaps she has already
looked into the whole copyright mess and can offer you some advice...
The experiments detailed in the paper featured music from the
following familiar names (I'm pretty sure it is all copyrighted ;)
Britney Spears
Aretha Franklin
Britney Spears
Red Hot Chili Pepper
The Police
Michael Jackson
The Beatles
Nirvana
The Police
Eagles
The Beatles
Journey
Jimi Hendrix
Outcast
The Ramones
Coldplay
Led Zeppelin
Bob Dylan
Aretha Franklin
The Beatles
Jimi Hendrix
Madonna
Madonna
Louis Armstrong
Rolling Stones
Rolling Stones
The Clash
Will Smith
The Ramones
Amy Winehouse
Bob Marley
Outcast
Eagles
Bob Marley
Simon & Garfunkle
Led Zeppelin
Red Hot Chili Pepper
Will Smith
Amy Winehouse
Journey
Katy Perry
The Beatles
Simon & Garfunkle
Queen
Nirvana
Katy Perry
Bob Dylan
Guns Nâ Roses
Queen
Louis Armstrong
Guns Nâ Roses
Coldplay
Michael Jackson
The Clash
U2
Regards,
John
2012/10/2 Kevin Austin <kevin.austin@xxxxxxxxxxxx>:
> I am not a copyright lawyer.
>
> Copyright is a national regulation and varies from country to country. I
> would suggest contacting the owner of the copyright for permission.
>
>
>
> Kevin
>
>
>
>
> On 2012, Oct 1, at 9:47 AM, Rob Ellis wrote:
>
> Dear list,
>
> Does anyone have a source for what constitutes "fair use" of musical stimuli
> (either commercial recordings or MIDI versions of commercial recordings)
> during an experiment or clinical trial? Can one use up to X seconds of
> material, an entire movement or song, etc?
>
> Any insights are welcome!
>
> Regards,
>
> Rob Ellis
>
>