Radar – Data-driven Grassroots Outreach In Latin America

I am thrilled to announce that after nearly 3 years of building relationships across Latin America, collaborating with local creator rights’ advocates, learning about some of the challenges affecting the flow of royalties in various regions, and educating songwriters, I am launching a dedicated team to support The Mechanical Licensing Collective’s mission to ensure songwriters, composers, lyricists, and music publishers in Latin America receive their mechanical royalties from streaming and download services in the U.S. accurately and on time.
RADAR is a data analytics and research platform that has already helped us identify songwriters who are self-published and potentially unaffiliated with their local CMO. Through culturally-relevant resources we are educating songwriters who may have royalties on hold at The MLC about their rights and their options for collecting their money such as joining their local CMO (an MLC member), hiring a publishing administrator (an MLC member), or, if it makes sense for their careers, to pursue direct membership. It is the songwriter’s choice within the framework of their local laws.
After a successful pilot in Colombia last year we are expanding across LATAM with team members in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico.
Welcome Daniela Arévalo Fernández (Mexico), Maria Ramirez (Colombia), Matías Bagato (Argentina), Renato Martini Martins (Brazil), and continued support by Stephanie Santiago-Rolón (Florida/Puerto Rico, USA) who has been a great collaborator in US-based Latin music since 2021.
Latin America, which has seen Mexico and Brazil named to IFPI’s Top 10 music markets in the world in 2024, is a priority due to the explosion of consumption of Latin music in the US, primarily in the form of digital streaming. The RIAA reported that Latin recorded music earned $1.4B in 2024 (98% of is from streaming), a steady increase over the previous two years, which also boasted over $1B. More US music consumers are listening to Spanish-language music every year; and when they do, it is our mission, in accordance with the Music Modernization Act to identify and locate the copyright owners to whom these digital audio mechanical royalties are due.
The MLC already has an incredible array of solutions, initiatives and technologies enabling us to match and pay out 90% of royalties received, but engaging small, new, and emerging independent artists is a challenge that all collection societies face and ought to solve.
With RADAR, whether it is a salsa band in Cali, a raggaeton artist in Medellin, a funk rapper in São Paulo, a samba singer in Salvador, a Latin rock duo in Buenos Aires, or an urbano group in Guadalajara, The MLC aims to take all reasonable efforts, from engaging CMOs and publishers, to tapping disconnected networks of independent self-published songwriters and composers to pay out every US digital mechanical dollar!
Introducing RADAR “Putting the hardest to find songwriters on The MLC’s radar.”
Encuentro Especial de Compositores Latinoamericanos (Special Meeting of Latin American Songwriters)
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Can’t Sleep. Creating Impact

It’s after 1 AM on a week night and I’m not even close to wanting to stop the flow. I’m in “the zone.” That familiar zone I’ve been in many times in the past when I built SongBank, TuneRegistry (acquired), RoyaltyClaim (acquired), and the award-winning DURP for The Mechanical Licensing Collective.
I’m in that zone where the energy of working from sun down to sun up bringing an idea to life is fueled by my belief that this new data analytics and research platform will positively impact the lives of thousands of independent music creators around the world. I’m in that zone where sketches become models, models become plans, and plans become implementations.
It’s a feeling that my fellow serial entrepreneurs and passionate data nerds understand all too well. When you’re this excited—not for the launch itself, but rather for the first group of artists to be empowered by your resource—sleep nearly becomes impossible (although, I’ll force myself to stop and rest because high productivity requires it). But nevertheless, I’m excited.
In 2025, we’re putting more global independent songwriters on the RADAR.
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[Podcast] SXSW 2025 – Crafting a Transparent Future for Music Rightsholders

Earlier this month, I had the pleasure of moderating the panel “Crafting a Transparent Future for Music Rightsholders” at SXSW. Joining me on stage were Chantal Epp (ClicknClear), Diego Maldonado (ONErpm), and Josh Simons (Vinyl Group). These companies are among the over 500 entities around the world that access The Mechanical Licensing Collective’s data through one or more of our data programs.
Click here to listen to the SXSW panel podcast to hear what we had to say about the future of transparency in music rights and data management on this podcast recording of our session.
View the PDF of the slides that were presented during the panel discussion. You can follow along with how the slides were presented by starting the podcast at audio mark 23:55.
Bonus: Below is a recording of a related webinar that I hosted last year during which each of these companies demonstrated how they leverage The MLC’s data in their businesses. Watch “Exploring The Use of The MLC’s Data: A Showcase of Three Companies”.
In accordance with the Music Modernization Act of 2018, The MLC develops and maintains a variety of data programs that are accessible to a diversity of companies around the world. The MLC’s database boasts over 30 Million musical works, with associated ownership information and matched sound recordings, and is enriched by our members and partners. As mandated by the MMA, The MLC makes the data available in bulk machine-readable formats and via an API.
Join The MLC’s Head of Third-Party Partnerships, Dae Bogan, in this 60-minute webinar showcasing real-world examples of The MLC’s data programs in use by differentiated technology companies around the world. Each of the selected showcase companies — ClickNClear (UK), Jaxsta (Australia), and ONErpm (Colombia) — will explain and demonstrate how it leverages The MLC’s data programs in the solutions that it offers to the music industry or in its backend operations.
Speakers:
· Jaxsta Showcase (Bulk Data Access Subscription) by Ben Orme, Jaxsta Product Lead / Business Development
· ClickNClear Showcase (Public Search API) by Chantal Epp, Founder & CEO
· ONErpm Showcase (DURP) by Diego Maldonado, Global Head of Publishing & Rights Management
DISCLAIMER: This video was uploaded to the MLC’s YouTube channel on 06/06/2024. Some content may no longer be accurate or up-to-date. For the latest information, please visit THEMLC.COM or reach out to our support team with any questions.
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Dae Bogan Receives Maestro of Metadata Nomination for the 3rd Annual Bizzy Awards

I am honored to announce that I have been named a finalist in the Maestro of Metadata category for the 3rd annual Bizzy Awards presented by the Music Business Association for my work at The Mechanical Licensing Collective (The MLC) as Head of Third-Party Partnerships, particularly in spearheading the Data Quality Initiative (DQI) Partner Program and developing the Distributor Unmatched Recordings Portal (DURP) global initiative.
Through these programs, The MLC has engaged, and I’ve liaised with my close collaborators Raph Amselli, Helena Cook, and Derek Medeiros, over 80 technology companies and music distributors around the world to ensure the integrity of musical works copyright ownership data and to identify and onboard independent music creators and rights-holders to be paid U.S. digital audio mechanical royalties.
I would like to thank the Music Business Association for including me in the finalist pool among fellow industry data nerds and technologists who I’ve had the pleasure of working with in various capacities over the last 10 years.
The 3rd annual Bizzy Awards dinner will take place on Wednesday, May 15 at the JW Marriott Nashville as part of the Music Biz 2024 Conference.
To learn more about The MLC’s data programs, visit https://www.themlc.com/data-programs-all.
To read the full announcement and finalists, see the Music Business Association’s press release https://musicbiz.org/news/music-business-association-names-2024-presidential-impact-award-recipients-finalists-for-crowd-sourced-bizzy-awards/.
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[Video] Recording of Panel ‘How Credits Improve Contributor Identification and Payment’ from DDEX Virtual Creator Credit Summit 2020
Here is the recording of the panel on which I spoke at the DDEX Virtual Creator Credit Summit 2020.
How Credits Improve Contributor Identification and Payment

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Dae Bogan Talks TikTok Metadata and Song Titles with Rolling Stone

Check it out.
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/tik-tok-hits-changing-titles-983383/
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Metadata And Money: On Background Vocalists and Session Musicians

Most independent artists do not know that 5% of their digital radio master royalties earned in the United States from the likes of Pandora, SiriusXM, Music Choice, iHeartRadio, Slacker, TuneIn, Last.fm, etc. are automatically allocated to a pool that is to be paid out to background vocalists and session musicians.
This money is allocated, *even if there are no background vocalists and sessions musicians on the record,* and are paid out in the United States by AFM & SAG-AFTRA Intellectual Property Rights Distribution Fund (aka “The Fund”).
Knowing this now, what should you do?
- Invite musician friends to perform background vocals or an instrument on your record.
- Invite the producer of the record to add background vocals or live instrumentation to their production (then, the producer would be able to qualify for these royalties; which is separate from his/her other producer royalties).
It is important to know that if you have background vocalists or session musicians on your record you MUST PUBLISH THE TRACK CREDITS! The Fund does track credit research to identify the individuals entitled to these royalties. THERE IS NO REGISTRATION PROCESS. They look for credits at places like AllMusic.com, Discogs, MusicBrainz, etc.
Don’t let your royalties go undistributed.
Get 👏 it 👏 done.
TuneRegistry, we deliver track credits to TiVo, which supplies data to AllMusic.com. We also deliver metadata and audio fingerprints to Gracenote, Audible Magic, Medianet, ACRCloud, Quantone, Exactuals – RAI, and Crunch Digital. These services power search and discovery features in hundreds of music apps, websites, audio devices, and smart speakers around the world.
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Execs From TuneRegistry, Music Reports, Crunch Digital, And BuzzAngle Music To Co-Panel Discussion On Music Rights & Metadata At UCLA
The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music’s Center for Music Innovation presents an evening panel “The Significance of Rights and Metadata in the Evolving Digital Music Ecosystem.”
As the music industry continues to be shaped and advanced by digital innovations, stakeholders face new and unforeseen business challenges. From rights holders to music licensees, data has become significantly more important to the accrual, collection, and distribution of royalties to income participants. This panel will discuss the issues relating to music rights and metadata in the digital music age and evaluate some of the ways in which these issues are being addressed by companies, music creators, and collective societies in the United States and abroad.
When: Thursday, July 7th at 6pm
Where: UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music
Panelists:
Jesse Morris, Morris Music Law/TuneRegistry
Bill Colitre, Music Reports
Keith Bernstein, Crunch Digital
Jim Lidestri, BuzzAngle/Border City Media
Moderator: Dae Bogan, TuneRegistry; Lecturer, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music
Register for free at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-significance-of-rights-and-metadata-in-the-evolving-digital-music-ecosystem-tickets-25898722777
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TuneRegistry: Next-Gen Music Rights & Metadata Management Platform Seeks Indie Music Beta Testers


TuneRegistry is seeking beta testers
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