Show Business: Wanna Buy a Revolution?
(2 of 2)
McCartney and George Harrison have not commented on the commercial flap, but Yoko Ono had a statement issued that said in part, "Yoko doesn't want to see John deified. She likes the idea that ((the commercial)) is making John's music accessible to a new generation." Ringo Starr is currently appearing on-camera in a wine-cooler commercial, but even if he and the others objected to use of the song, they would have no legal recourse. They do not own the rights to their Beatles music. Master rights (that is, rights to use the song as recorded by the Beatles) are controlled by Capitol Records in North America and EMI in the rest of the world. Publishing rights -- in effect, permission to use the song -- are now controlled by SBK Songs on % behalf of Michael Jackson. He successfully bid $47.5 million against McCartney, among others, for ATV Music when it became available in 1985; ATV's catalog included 251 Beatles tunes. Nike paid the record companies an estimated $250,000 for a year's use of Revolution and a similar amount to SBK.
"We're not beating every cent out of the catalog," insists Pat Lucas, director of West Coast operations for SBK, who adds that after turning down some 20 copyright requests (with a potential value of a "few million dollars"), she and Jackson "sat down to decide which songs he would consider usable. His love for a song was the main criterion. He'd never use Eleanor Rigby or The Fool on the Hill. Those songs touched him in a different place, and besides, I can't imagine a suitable tie-in." They came up, Lucas says, with a list of "only 40 you'll ever possibly see in an ad. All Together Now. Good Morning, Good Morning . . ."
Even for performers who do not own publishing companies, rock can be a straight business deal. Jackson, of course, fired up the rock-ad trend by bopping through his own Pepsi commercials. Phil Collins and Genesis look delighted singing out for Michelob. Randy Newman, whose tunes have been used to hype Ford, NutraSweet and Nike, draws the line at booze commercials but says, "Music isn't sacred. Rock 'n' roll isn't intrinsically holier than the advertising industry." Beach Boys songs have gone to everyone from Lincoln- Mercury (Wouldn't It Be Nice) to Sunkist soft drinks (Good Vibrations), although Lead Singer Mike Love is miffed that the group has never been asked to sing for the ads. "We'd be very willing to do commercials, provided they didn't hype toxic waste or nuclear plants, whisky or cigarettes," he says. "But if a company is selling Hide-a-Beds and is willing to part with lots of dinero, why not?"
Well, now. There are some people for whom rock is not just a diversion or a vocation, or even just a personal expression. It is a lifeline. "My songs," says John Cougar Mellencamp, "weren't written to sell products." Chrysler wanted Bruce Springsteen for a major campaign and floated an offer estimated at $12 million and counting. Springsteen responded as he always does to such propositions: he refused even to discuss it. When he sang, in Badlands, "I believe in the faith that can save me," Springsteen was summoning up the spiritual power of rock. John Lennon held to the same articles of faith. Mark David Chapman killed him. But it took a couple of record execs, one sneaker company and a soul brother to turn him into a jingle writer.Jay Cocks.
- « PREV PAGE
- 1
- 2
Most Popular »
- Prosecuting Mohammed: Harder Than You Think
- Retailers Gear up for Black Friday
- Now It's Official: There Is Water on the Moon
- 2012: End-of-World Disaster Porn
- Does Mexico City Need a Red-Light District?
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- Why We Shouldn't Give Christmas Gifts
- How a Bank Robber Became an Antihero in France
- It's Twilight in America
- In a Malaria Hot Spot, Resistance to a Key Drug
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Why We Shouldn't Give Christmas Gifts
- Now It's Official: There Is Water on the Moon
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- Prosecuting Mohammed: Harder Than You Think
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- London Museum Asks Public What to Pitch
- The Meaning and Mythos of Manny Pacquiao
- Jazz Musician Wynton Marsalis







RSS