In this case Vera Lynn's copyright as a performer has already expired but would be reinstated by the EU extension.
Composer: Life + 95 Performer: recording + 50
The proposed change is to performer, to +95.
The song remains under copyright due to the composer timescale, not the performer.
Brian McNeil
-----Original Message----- From: foundation-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org [mailto:foundation-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of daniwo59@aol.com Sent: 20 February 2008 23:16 To: foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] WMF/EFF and Copyright extension
In a message dated 2/20/2008 4:57:57 PM Eastern Standard Time, brian.mcneil@wikinewsie.org writes:
You need to look up who wrote these songs, and when they died. You can, with a fair degree of certainty, say that anything written during the 20th century won't be available to us. If it was written more than a hundred years ago you're starting to look at it being available to us in the near future, but that's where the performer's (c) comes in and the proposed legislation impacts us.
Long Way to Tipperary was cowritten by Jack Judge, who died in 1938, and Harry Williams who died in 1922. If it were solely Williams, the song would have entered the public domain in 2017, i.e., nine years from now. On the other hand, Vera Lynn, who recorded it in 1939, is still alive today. In other words, not in the lifetime of anyone actually reading this email.
Danny
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