This time, a modest musician
who licensed a song to Sony for use in LittleBigPlanet 2 didn't get the memo that he had to suppress his excitement.
Not exact matches
For evidence of artists
who've been able to maintain their credibility while
licensing their music for commercials, you might look no further than a certain Canadian songstress
who got a «big break» when her
song was featured in an iPod commercial in 2007:
If anything, the tiny - budgeted film (though not that poor considering the filmmakers
licensed a David Bowie
song) is a sizzle reel for Josh Trank
who shows he can do on a fraction of the budget what many directors in Hollywood can't do with hundreds of millions.
Ultimately wouldn't the company that owns the rights to a
song also be the one
who holds / grants the
license?
Garry Williams,
who represented the plaintiff said that the
song is rarely
licensed and rights to it are «enormously valuable.»