YouTube is blocking some songs from popular artists a week before a licensing contract expires. This could be a negotiation ...
Songs by Adele, Bob Dylan, Green Day, R.E.M., Burna Boy ... However, along with the bruising UMG-TikTok battle earlier this ...
Bob Dylan has released ... to every single one of his songs. That being so, Dylan’s catalog is not only expansive, it’s also incredibly assorted and obtains music that one wouldn’t even ...
Songs by Adele, Bob Dylan, Green Day ... one such dispute between YouTube and Warner Music Group resulted in Warner pulling its videos from the platform for some nine months across 2008 and ...
YouTube and YouTube Music have removed numerous songs in the US due to a licensing dispute with SESAC, a performance rights organisation representing over 1.5 million songs from artists like Adele ...
If we had to guess what Dylan’s favorite Beatles song was, we would pick something like “Yesterday” or “Let It Be”–something more similar to his own style of music. However ...
the music industry, and the involved parties. Why Were Songs by Adele and Bob Dylan Banned? The root of the issue lies in the failure of negotiations between YouTube and SESAC. YouTube has stated ...
Songs like Adele‘s “Someone Like You,” Green Day‘s “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” Bob Dylan‘s “I Want You” and R.E.M.’s “Losing My Religion” have been blocked by YouTube in ...
Songs by Adele, Bob Dylan, Green Day, R.E.M., Burna Boy ... presumably because they feature SESAC-affiliated songwriters. Reps for YouTube Music and SESAC did not immediately respond to Variety ...
Some (but not all) songs by artists including Adele, Mariah Carey, Bob Dylan, Green Day ... as just a few examples of music videos that remain unplayable on YouTube while its licensing deal ...
In one message they explained that the music license agreement ... by the Hollywood Reporter. The post YouTube Blocks Songs by Adele, Nirvana, Bob Dylan and More Due to Legal Dispute appeared ...
Original Story (9/30): In the US, YouTube has pulled music videos by Adele, Green Day, Kendrick Lamar, Britney Spears, Bob Dylan, and other artists because of an ongoing copyright dispute with ...