British Phonographic Industry

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British Phonographic Industry
British Phonographic Industry.svg
AbbreviationBPI
Formation1973; 48 years ago (1973)
Legal statusNon-profit company
PurposeMusic industry in the
United Kingdom
Location
  • County Hall, London
Region served
United Kingdom
Membership
British music companies
Chairman
Ged Doherty
Chief executive
Geoff Taylor
Main organ
BPI Council
Websitewww.bpi.co.uk

The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) is the British recorded music industry's trade association. It runs the BRIT Awards, the Classic BRIT Awards, National Album Day, is home to the Mercury Prize, and co-owns the Official Charts Company with the Entertainment Retailers Association, and awards UK music sales through the BRIT Certified Awards.

Structure[]

Its membership comprises hundreds of music companies including all three "major" record companies in the UK (Warner Music UK, Sony Music Entertainment UK, and Universal Music UK), and over 450 independent record labels and small to medium-sized music businesses.

History[]

It has represented the interests of British record companies since being formally incorporated in 1973 when the principal aim was to promote British music and fight copyright infringement.

In 2007, the association's legal name was changed from British Phonographic Industry Limited (The).

In September 2008, the BPI became one of the founding members of UK Music, an umbrella organisation representing the interests of all parts of the industry.

Awards[]

It founded the annual BRIT Awards for the British music industry in 1977, and, later, The Classic BRIT Awards. The organising company, BRIT Awards Limited, is a fully owned subsidiary of the BPI. Proceeds from both shows go to the BRIT Trust, the charitable arm of the BPI that has donated over £26m to charitable causes nationwide since its foundation in 1989. In September 2013, the BPI presented the first ever BRITs Icon Award to Sir Elton John. The BPI also endorsed the launch of the Mercury Prize for the Album of the Year in 1992, and since 2016 has organised the Prize.

The recorded music industry's Certified Awards program, which attributes Platinum, Gold and Silver status to singles, albums and music videos (Platinum and Gold only) based on their sales performance (see BRIT Certified Awards), has been administered by the BPI since its inception in 1973.

The BRIT Trust[]

The BRIT Trust is the charitable arm of the BPI, the trust was conceived in 1989 by a collection of leading music industry individuals with a mission to give young people a chance to express their musical creativity regardless of race, class, sex or ability. The BRIT Trust is the only music charity actively supporting all types of education across the entire spectrum of music. Through the projects it supports, which include Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy and the BRIT School, the Trust offers young people the opportunity to enhance their lives through music. Proceeds from the BRIT Awards and the Classic BRITs shows go to the BRIT Trust, which has donated over £26m to charitable causes nationwide since its foundation.

The BRIT School[]

Opened in September 1991, the BRIT School is a joint venture between The BRIT Trust and the Department for Education and Skills (DfES). Based at Selhurst in Croydon, the school is the only non-fee-paying performing arts school in the UK. It teaches up to 1,100 students each year aged from 14 to 19 years in music, dance, drama, musical theatre, production, media and art & design. Students are from completely diverse backgrounds and are not required to stick to their own discipline; dancers learn songwriting, pianists can learn photography. Nor do students have to work/perform in the evening to pay for the tuition; all they have to do is show their determination to succeed in the competitive creative industries.

Certifications[]

A gold certification for Eric Clapton's album August

The BPI administers the BRIT Certified Platinum, Gold and Silver awards scheme for music releases in the United Kingdom. The level of the award varies depending on the format of the release (albums, singles or music videos) and the level of sales achieved. Although the awards program was for many years based on the level of shipments by record labels to retailers, since July 2013 certifications have been automatically allocated by the BPI upon the relevant sales thresholds being achieved in accordance with Official Charts Company data.

Since July 2014, audio streaming has been included for singles and from June 2015 audio streams were added to album certifications. In July 2018 video streams were included in singles certifications for the first time. Streaming's contributions to chart-eligible sales totals for singles and albums are calculated using the methodology employed by the Official Charts Company for consumption at title level.

In April 2018 a new Breakthrough certification was introduced, pertaining to an artist's first album to reach 30,000 sales. Additionally, the program was re-branded as BRIT Certified, with public promotion of the programme being assumed by the BRIT Awards' social media outlets and digital properties. Chief executive Geoff Taylor justified the change by stating that it was part of an effort to cross-promote the certifications with "the UK's biggest platform for artistic achievement".[1]

Format Status
Silver Gold Platinum
Album [nb 1]60,000[nb 1] [nb 1]100,000[nb 1] [nb 1]300,000[nb 1]
Single [nb 2]200,000[nb 2] [nb 2]400,000[nb 2] [nb 2]600,000[nb 2]
Music DVD 25,000 50,000

BPI council[]

  • Jo Bartlett – Warner Music UK
  • Pat Carr – Remote Control Agency
  • Alice Dyson-Jones – OneMedia IP
  • Nick Hartley – PIAS
  • Vanessa Higgins – Regent Street Records
  • Jason Iley – Sony Music UK
  • David Joseph – Universal Music UK
  • Max Lousada – Warner Music UK
  • Iain McNay – Cherry Red Records
  • Henry Semmence – Absolute Label Services
  • Nicola Tuer – Sony Music UK
  • Geoff Taylor – chief executive officer, BPI and BRIT Awards Limited
  • Selina Webb – Universal Music UK
  • Kiaron Whitehead – general counsel, BPI

Source: BPI

Anti-piracy operations[]

The BPI have developed bespoke software and automated crawling tools created in-house by the BPI which search for members repertoire across more than 400 known infringing sites and generate URLs which are sent to Google as a DMCA Notice for removal within hours of receipt.[3] Additionally, personnel are also seconded to the City of London Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit to support anti-"piracy" operations.

See also[]

  • Home Taping Is Killing Music
  • Official Charts Company

Similar organisations[]

  • ARIA, the Australian Recording Industry Association, is the Australian industry association.
  • FACT, the Federation Against Copyright Theft, is the UK anti-copyright infringement organisation for the motion picture industry.
  • IFPI, the International Federation of Phonogram and Videogram Producers is the worldwide music industry group.
  • IRMA, the Irish Recorded Music Association, is the Irish industry association.
  • RIAA, the Recording Industry Association of America, is the United States' music industry association.
  • RIAJ, the Recording Industry Association of Japan, is the Japanese music industry association.
  • RMNZ, the Recorded Music New Zealand, is the New Zealand industry association.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c The number of sales required to qualify for Platinum, Gold and Silver discs was changed to the current thresholds of Platinum (300,000 units), Gold (100,000 units) and Silver (60,000 units) in 1979 for albums above a minimum RRP. Below the minimum RRP, the thresholds are doubled. Prior to this, the thresholds were based on monetary revenue: Platinum (£1,000,000), Gold (£150,000 from April 1973 to September 1974, £250,000 from September 1974 to January 1977, and £300,000 from 1977 until 1979) and Silver (£75,000 from April 1973 to January 1975, £100,000 from January 1975 to January 1977, and £150,000 from 1977 until 1979).
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c The number of sales required to qualify for Platinum, Gold and Silver discs was dropped for singles released after 1 January 1989 to the current thresholds of Silver (200,000 units), Gold (400,000 units), and Platinum (600,000 units). Prior to this, the thresholds were Silver (250,000 units), Gold (500,000 units), and Platinum (1,000,000 units).[2]

References[]

  1. ^ "BPI rebrands platinum, gold and silver discs as BRIT Certified Awards". www.musicweek.com. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  2. ^ Gallup (4 February 1989). "The Top of the Pops Chart" (PDF). Record Mirror: 4. Retrieved 16 July 2010.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ IP Crime Group. "IP Crime Report 2013/14" (PDF): 52. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2014. Retrieved 19 October 2014. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

External links[]

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