Top Ten Tips for Licensing Songs in Film & TV

It’s not about you. Find out what projects people you want to contact are working on and what they have been credited with in the past and use that as a means to get more information about what they are looking for and more importantly what they are not looking for.

Know the show (company). If a music supervisor works certain shows, find out what recent placements were and use that as a way to narrow down what you submit.

Know the artists. Contact artists and songwriters who have frequently been placed on certain shows and ask them for advice – you have lost nothing if they don’t respond.

Know the boss and the assistant. As important as music supervisors like to be, we are at the mercy of directors and producers who have their ideas about what they want. Find out the power players for each show. Start with the composers if applicable, music editor, director, writer and producer and perhaps the marketing executive or promos editor. Knowing their names allows you to converse about what a music supervisor may be dealing with. Also do not forget that most music supervisors first point of contact with a new artist is from their assistant’s or people who work under them. Be nice and you may get a mention, be mean, and they may forget you exist.

Know the work flow. Find out the taping schedule of major TV shows and films you seek placement on and track their status, by knowing when they are in pre-production, filming, and post-production, you can determine what kind of priorities a certain music supervisor may have.

Think outside the box office. Face-to-face encounters still hold the most weight. Find a creative way to meet decision makers in their element. Become an expert on their scene and whereabouts and become a part of the community.

There’s no such thing as good music. Depending on what I am looking for the best song I’ve heard in a decade could be bad music. Do not send specific songs that may be really good without tying them into specific emotions and experiences.

Keep the details all in one place. Have every available version of a song in one folder, labeled properly with ID3 Tag info that includes the genre, lyrics, emotions the song evokes, as well as composers full names and PRO’s, publishing companies with contact info, master owner with contact info, splits, and in another place keep bios, headshots, contact information, and copies of each submission you’ve made. This is a music supervisors dream, get as close to making our dreams come true as humanly possible.

Follow other songwriters. This is self-explanatory. Get on the email lists of artists who continually get placements, find out who manages them, who books them, and whether they are affiliated with any music consulting firms or lawyers. Their team could be yours.

Be predictable, but only after your first few placements. Music supervisors like to put artists and songwriters in categories because it helps us do our job efficiently. If you can deliver music that has a similar style and message, chances are we can continually find a home for your music in a number of different projects. If you are all over the place musically and lyrically, then you become unreliable. Some directors like certain artists and when they ask for songs from you, they are basing their request on the last song they liked from you.

About Carolyn Richardson

Carolyn Richardson music supervises for Entertainment Tonight and The Insider where she searches for, identifies and secures rights for music to enhance programming of these shows. She brings almost a decade of experience in event marketing, sponsorship, promotions, distribution, and music licensing for companies such as Sony BMG, Image Entertainment, Live Nation and others. She also brings a tenacious entrepreneurial spirit to licensing and provides pitching services to independent publishing companies, songwriters, producers and score composers for placement in all media platforms. Her passion is to use the power of music to bring audiences together, tell stories and inspire positive change. On the creative side, Carolyn is a singer and songwriter who began her career in music in the gospel church. Her credits include songs placed on ABC Family, SpikeTV, The Weinstein Company, BET and Utopia Films. Her goals are to continue her current success in music supervision, licensing and publishing by bringing great music to the masses. Carolyn is a Christian and enjoys participating in music outreach programs for the sick, shut-in, poor and homeless.  Contact: www.linkedin.com/in/carolynmrichardson/