Allow me to shed some light on how music production works in a business setting - a thread https://twitter.com/sexiuaI/status/1269627037246869504">https://twitter.com/sexiuaI/s...
                        
                            
                            
                            
                        
                        
                        
                        
                                                
                    
                    
                                    
                    
                        
                        
                        A sync is basically a music license that you sell. So the original producers sent the song to SM and they paid the $500 for the sync.
There are 5 producers on the song, and in total, there are 9 people who worked on the track and/or lyrics, including Mark and Taeyong
                    
                                    
                    There are 5 producers on the song, and in total, there are 9 people who worked on the track and/or lyrics, including Mark and Taeyong
                        
                        
                        The second you sell the license, that& #39;s all the money you get.
Unless you write in your contact to get a % of royalties, you only get the sync.
Tiffany has the skill and work ethic to do music professionally, a privilege not a lot of musicians get to have.
                    
                                    
                    Unless you write in your contact to get a % of royalties, you only get the sync.
Tiffany has the skill and work ethic to do music professionally, a privilege not a lot of musicians get to have.
                        
                        
                        This is why I only have one other writer I work with.
It gets messy, and the fee has to be split.
I& #39;ve given away so many tracks for "exposure" I would& #39;ve loved to have gotten $66 for a wildly popular song.
It means I can charge more the next time a company approaches me
                    
                                    
                    It gets messy, and the fee has to be split.
I& #39;ve given away so many tracks for "exposure" I would& #39;ve loved to have gotten $66 for a wildly popular song.
It means I can charge more the next time a company approaches me
                        
                        
                        She signed that contact. Or her publisher did, that stated she get a percentage of the sync.
It& #39;s legal, and SM did nothing wrong by the law.
Morally, it& #39;s a different story, but SM is a company, not a human.
                    
                                    
                    It& #39;s legal, and SM did nothing wrong by the law.
Morally, it& #39;s a different story, but SM is a company, not a human.
                        
                        
                        I have been approached by two companies, but I turned them down because we couldn& #39;t agree on terms. 
Depending on the track, my minimum is $300 for a fully produced song. They couldn& #39;t agree to that, so I walked away
                    
                                    
                    Depending on the track, my minimum is $300 for a fully produced song. They couldn& #39;t agree to that, so I walked away
                        
                        
                        The more I& #39;m looking into this, the more I think something is going on with her publisher
                        
                        
                        
                        
                                                
                    
                    
                
                 
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