Difference between a Composition and a Sound Recording
By Zil Distribution
Understanding this distinction is fundamental to the music business.
The Composition
A composition (also called a "musical work") is the underlying song — the melody, harmony, lyrics, and arrangement. It exists independently of any recording.
Think of it as the blueprint of a song. It can be written on sheet music, hummed, or played live. The composition is created by songwriters and composers.
The Sound Recording
A sound recording (also called a "master") is a specific recorded performance of a composition. It's the actual audio file you hear when you press play.
Think of it as the finished product. Multiple different sound recordings can be made of the same composition (covers, remixes, live versions). The sound recording is created by performing artists and producers.
Why Does It Matter?
Each generates different types of royalties:
Composition Royalties
- Mechanical royalties (from reproductions)
- Performance royalties (from public performances)
- Sync fees (from use in visual media)
- Collected by publishers and PROs
Sound Recording Royalties
- Digital streaming royalties
- Physical sales revenue
- Neighboring rights
- Collected by labels and distributors
Example
If Artist B records a cover of a song originally composed by Songwriter A:
- Songwriter A earns composition royalties from Artist B's version
- Artist B earns sound recording royalties from their specific recording
- Both versions coexist legally with proper licensing