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P L A I N T I F
F S
Eric Eldred and Eldritch
Press
Higginson
Book Company
The
Higginson Book Company, managed by Laura Bjorklund, is a for-profit
sole proprietorship that reprints books based on consumer demand in
fields such as genealogy, historic maps, local and county history, and
the Civil and Revolutionary Wars. It focuses on books originally printed
in small editions that are no longer in print and therefore difficult
to obtain from any other source. Ms. Bjorklund and her employees carefully
research any book published after 1922 to determine whether or not it
is copyrighted, which is often very difficult given the type of rare
books in which they specialize. The Copyright Extension Act prevented
works published in 1923 from entering the public domain at the end of
1998. Because of the difficulties in tracking the authors or heirs of
such old works, the Act effectively means that Higginson Book Company
will be unable to reprint any books copyrighted in 1923 for another
20 years.
Tri-Horn
International
Edward R. Kamp and his partner David Twohig started Tri-Horn International
in Scituate, Massachusetts in 1993. Tri-Horn International is dedicated
to developing and selling products that stir golfers to investigate
the game's history and traditions. Its products are not only historical,
but, they hope, instructional and inspirational. For example, the "Sport
Movie Book"™ is a small book that resembles an old movie when flipped
through quickly with the thumb. The company planned to use pictures
of early century golfers such as Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen in these
books. "The Sport Movie Book"™ would incorporate the golfer's career
statistics and a portrait of the golfer. The Copyright Term Extension
Act has impeded Tri-Horn's plans to use such pictures and other materials
from the 1920's in the multimedia products. The problem is especially
significant because the 1920's was an important decade in golf history.
It will be difficult, if not impossible, to research the copyright history
and get permission to use such old works, and therefore some of the
products may never be made.
Edwin
F. Kalmus Co.
Edwin F. Kalmus Co.,
Inc. is a for-profit company located in Boca Raton, Florida, that specializes
in the publishing of public domain music for orchestras. Leon Galison
is the President of the company, and his grandfather Edwin F. Kalmus
started the company in 1926. The company has approximately 8,500 active
customers. Masters Music, a division of the publishing company, specializes
in publishing piano, solo and chamber music that is in the public domain.
Mr. Galison publishes a catalog at the beginning of every school year
listing the titles that will be available for purchase. The catalog
published in the fall of 1998 contained a list of works that would be
available on January 1, 1999, as they were expected to enter the public
domain at that time. This list included works by such famous composers
as Bela Bartok, Maurice Ravel and Richard Strauss. The company was forced
to distribute a retraction after the Copyright Term Extension Act was
passed, noting that these works would not enter the public domain until
January of 2019. This has drastically effected the Kalmus business in
light of the fact that they almost exclusively publish public domain
music.
Luck's
Music Library
Randolph P. Luck is
the President of Luck's Music Library, a for-profit company located
in Madison Heights, Michigan, that specializes in selling and renting
classical orchestral sheet music. Luck's Music Library rents and sells
music to approximately 7,000 orchestras and 12,000 individuals worldwide,
and the music ranges from elementary-level to operatic. Approximately
15 percent of their business is in renting music, a large portion of
which is in the public domain. About half of the music they sell is
also in the public domain. When a piece enters the public domain, the
company can sell or rent it for a drastically lower price. For example,
"Alborada Del Gracioso" by Maurice Ravel, which was written in 1923,
is rented to community orchestras for $360.00 for two performances.
Luck's Music Library planned to sell the piece for $150.00 (to be performed
an unlimited number of times) starting in the beginning of 1999 when
it was scheduled to enter the public domain. The Copyright Term Extension
Act prevented this piece and many others from entering the public domain,
significantly impairing the plans of Luck's Music Library. The Act also
impedes the ability of orchestras, many of which have small annual budgets,
from playing these famous works.
Copyright's
Commons
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