Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 6, 2026

Master recording

A master recording, or simply a master, is the original recording—including post-recording mixes and production edits—of an audio performance, from which all analog and digital copies of the audio are derived. The term refers only to the recorded performance of a song; it does not cover the composition of recorded material, which is a separate copyright that belongs to the songwriter unless ownership of the copyright is transferred or sold to a separate entity.

Last revised
Jun 6, 2026
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A master recording, or simply a master, is the original recording—including post-recording mixes and production edits—of an audio performance, from which all analog and digital copies of the audio are derived.12 The term refers only to the recorded performance of a song; it does not cover the composition of recorded material, which is a separate copyright that belongs to the songwriter unless ownership of the copyright is transferred or sold to a separate entity.3

References

References

  1. "Sheryl Crow: Universal Studios fire destroyed all my master tapes". BBC. 2019-06-25. Retrieved 2025-12-08.
  2. Passman, Donald S. (2006). All you need to know about the music business (6th ed.; [rev. and updated] ed.). New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-0-7432-9318-1.
  3. Osborne, Richard (2023). Owning the masters: a history of sound recording copyright. New York, London, Oxford, New Delhi, Sydney: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5013-4593-7.