If a song’s music & lyrics were published before January 1, 1928, then the song is considered in the Public Domain in the US. Please visit pdinfo.com to learn more about Public Domain works and see a list of songs that qualify. It’s important to know that if a work falls within the Public Domain, only that exact version is not protected under US copyright law. Other people may have created arrangements for that work that ARE under copyright. Do your research, please!

 

If you have a public domain song, then you can list that information the following way:

Songwriter

For a Public Domain track, you can enter “Traditional” in the first name field and then “Song” in the last name field.

Publisher

In the publisher field when asked “Does this track have a publisher” select YES. Then list the publisher as Public Domain.

 

DO NOT enter your name, “N/A” or “None” in those fields.

 

If it’s NOT an old traditional song, but you just don’t know who wrote it, you need to do more research! You’re not supposed to be recording and releasing someone else’s song without paying the copyright owner of that song anyway, so if you don’t know who it is, you’re probably breaking the copyright law and we can’t be putting that out into the lawyer-infested waters of digital distribution, until you do things correctly.

 

If you are an international artist: keep in mind that Boomkit is a US based company and we must follow the public domain considerations for the United States. Though a song might be in the public domain internationally, it may not be in here in the United States. If this is the case, Boomkit cannot consider the title public domain but rather it would need to be marked as a cover song due to our copyright laws.