I don't know what library they were using, though (but they did pay for it!) - maybe they were lying to me, but we did do the odd bit for TV, all filled with library music, and I never heard a word about cue sheets. The buyout price up front was how the library company made money. Sorry.Really? I worked as an editor at a post house that didn't do cue sheets, they said they didn't have to based on the terms of their library - they made not filing them as a condition of purchase for the library. You won't find any library that does not care if you don't file cue sheets. It's simple, it's free to do, most every library will help you and it helps the composers actually have a fighting chance at making a modest living. The broadcaster (not to mention ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, etc.) require it for broadcast. I could suggest several, but I'm not going to even bother.Ä«uyout, licensed, non-buyout, stolen, whatever - if it's for broadcast you MUST file a cuesheet.
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