KaraokeIan wrote:
Some people do make homemade tracks themselves. I've seen quite a few. They usually take background music from other karaoke songs and make their own parody lyrics. I've seen some where they do the vocal removals on the original and then add their own lyrics. I have a homemade version of "Patiently" by Journey which was never released by a manufacturer. Technically, as long as you have ones that use the original music and play the stuff in a venue that pays their ASCAP fess, they're perfectly legal. The ones that use other karaoke background tracks are violating copyright on the music. I find it ironic that you can use the original music and be legal, but if you use a copy of a rerecording, you're not.
This is not so. Depending.
If you use a vocal remover, you have created a derivative copy, which is a copyright violation without proper authorization.
If you display synced lyrics, this is a copyright violation without proper authorization.
Parody lyrics synced to someone else’s music would be a copyright violation without authorization.
Parody lyrics synced to your rendition (you play the instruments) of somebody else’s music might be ok.
Singing to the unchanged original without synced lyrics would be ok.
Homemade karaoke without proper authorization in almost every case would be a violation of copyright when used for commercial purposes.
I’m not trying to be some holier than thou character.
I have created some homemade tracks myself and had great fun with it. I just don’t use them to try to make money.
I sing my homemades at other people’s shows.