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2 years ago
I think the digital "tracing" of it is the creation of a derivative work, something like would be created if you watched a television show and wrote down the movements of the actors to create a "movement script" of the show. The execution of the "tracing" on a piano is a performance of the derivative work, which becomes another copyrightable work when fixed in a tangible medium of expression by recording.
Given the creation of the derivative "tracing," I think Zenph owes Gould. I don't see how fair use would apply to Zenph's sales of recordings which compete fairly directly with Gould's recording - though it certainly could apply in other cases.
2 years ago
2 years ago
The remaining interesting question is whether the performance of a piece in a way that mimics Gould's techniques violates Gould's copyright in the prior recording. I don't think doing so is a public performance of the earlier recording, which would violate Gould's rights. It's a public performance of the public domain work.
But making a recording of a piece (remember the "fixation" requirement) that mimics Gould techniques - techniques distinctive enough to the Gould recording and not dictated by the score, common fingering techniques, etc. - might violate Gould's copyright in the prior recording. I think it could be a derivative work.
(Just going on my faded recollection of copyright law - happy to hear from more people who are more current on the law and more insighgtful.)
2 years ago
2 years ago
But what if I have a really, really good memory, and flawless, precise fingering technique?
I guess it would be infringement, especially if they are marketing it as "Gould's 1955 performance."
2 years ago
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2 years ago
jens