Originally Posted by Sunset Poet
Originally Posted by Fdemetrio
When I switch to suno first thing im gonna do os sung a [naughty word removed] load of songs a capella. Then im guaranteed owner of the lyric and melody, and I will see how suno supports me.

No. You are not guaranteed.
When you upload your song to SUNO's platform, you are along for the ride.
The moment that SUNO makes any kind of production, all bets are off regarding ownership, a cappela or anything else.

At this point, I don't think that SUNO even knows how it all washes out.

Theoretically, you will always retain ownership over the lyrics, which they can promote if they used them in their production... with nothing owed to you.

They did not create a masterful machine that can turn bad songs into impressive ones, because their first priority is people who write the bad songs.

If not for SUNO, your "songs" would have forever remained just scribblings in a shoe box...and they know it. Your songs exist in somewhat presentable form only because of SUNO, and they know that also.

And they are going to write their TERMS OF SERVICE accordingly.

Wrong a song is by definition, lyric and melody, its all the copyright one can get.

You can not copyright..
A chord progression, a arrangement, a groove or beat.

So just by you typing your lyric in, they would be forced to reveal you did. Meanwhile you already have lyrucs copyrighted the minute you type them somewhere.

Now granted, the difference between millions of melodies out there, is negligible.

But at very least you are just as much the songwriter entering lyric and melody into suno, as you are sending it to a demo service.

I think the artist is as important or more importsnt than the work.

They are the product.

Its just more a knowing you done right creating the song

Last edited by Fdemetrio; 3 hours ago.