Senate Sends Record Bill to Assembly
A bill seeking to stop California’s $41-billion recording industry from holding singers to long-term contracts is on its way to the state Assembly after clearing the Senate.
The Senate’s 25-10 vote keeps the bill alive as the record industry and some of its biggest acts continue talks toward an agreement on reforming a longtime practice of the music business.
Recording artists complain that record companies lock hungry, naive artists into standard seven-album contracts that can last 15 years or longer. The recording industry, which won a 1987 exemption from state labor law, is California’s only business to legally bind employees longer than seven years.
The bill has only weeks to pass the Assembly.
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