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All Music Licenses Now Cover Mobile Apps & Games

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Photo credit: Game Prototyping With Wooden Blocks & Pieces via photopin (license)

To simplify my licensing terms for apps & games developers, all my music licenses have now been updated to cover use in mobile apps & games (e.g. for Android or iOS developers).

So if you need some music for your game or mobile app you can now choose from any of my music licenses with prices starting at £9.99 for non-commercial use, £29.99 for commercial use or £39.99 for one of my multiple-use royalty free music collections. All of these will cover use of my music in your game or app, depending on your app and what type of license you need.

To sum it up briefly, my non-royalty free individual tracks (one-off use) are £9.99 if the app is free or £29.99 if the app is a commercial (paid) release. Then I also have royalty free album collections where you can use the music repeatedly in unlimited games, apps and any other audio visual productions commercially for £39.99.

And to simplify other parts of my licensing terms, I’ve also removed all terms that previously limited you to only being able to sell up to 1,000 copies of physical units of your productions (e.g. DVDs or Blu Rays of your films). When you now buy a commercial license or a royalty free collection, there are no longer any limits to the amount of physical releases of your films and productions you can sell! Unlimited!

If you have any questions about my licensing terms or using the music, take a look at the FAQs or licensing info, or please feel free to get in touch if you have any other questions.

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Summer Skies: 4K Ultra HD Timelapse Compilation By Andrias Joensen

Summer Skies - 4K Ultra HD Timelapse Compilation

Great new time lapse video from photographer Andrias Joensen at AHJ Photography that features music from my royalty free music collection Volume 8 (Deep Space Ambient).

“This new timelapse compilation focuses on the many Sun sequences, mainly sunsets, I’ve shot , mostly in 2015, but also a few from 2014. There’s also a sequence from the March 20th Solar Eclipse.”

Andrias Joensen

You can see more of Andrias’ work at the following sites:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4jnL0S2_snShP47Zk10Ixg
https://www.facebook.com/AHJPhotography
https://www.flickr.com/photos/119407535@N07/
http://www.astrobin.com/users/Amra/

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Summer Milky Way & Airglow Time Lapse By Harley Grady

Summer Milky Way & Airglow Time Lapse (4K ULTRA HD)

Here’s a really nice new Milky Way time lapse video from photographer Harley Grady that features my ambient space music track Coronal Mass Ejection.

“We’ve had lots of rain in the north Texas area. Finally had a clear (and free) weekend to shoot a time lapse of the Milky Way. Notice the green glow at around the :50 second mark? That’s an astronomical phenomena called ‘airglow’.”

Harley Grady

Find more of Harley’s work and license his footage from these links:

http://www.Flickr.com/Harles99

http://www.youtube.com/user/Harles99

http://www.pond5.com/artist/AstroTimeLapse

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New Ambient Space Music Track ‘Coronal Mass Ejection’

Ambient Space Music: Coronal Mass Ejection by Simon Wilkinson

Now up on the site is my new ambient space music track Coronal Mass Ejection (promo video above). The track is an 8 minute atmospheric instrumental soundscape with a subtle but epic slow burning deep space/solar feel.

It’s ideal background mood music for listening to when your mind is focused on things like writing or reading sci-fi novels, programming, gaming etc. You can buy the track just for personal listening and it’s also available to instantly license for use in your own space videos, films and documentaries:

http://www.thebluemask.com/music-tracks/coronal-mass-ejection/

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New Ambient Album Promo Video ‘Cryosleep Dreams’

Ambient Space Music: Cryosleep Dreams (album sampler) by Simon Wilkinson

I’ve just released a new album of ambient space music called Cryosleep Dreams and you can watch a promo video for it above. The album features 10 tracks (101 minutes) of atmospheric and cinematic music with a sci-fi/space theme.

The music is instrumental and richly textured and varies from dark drones to light, airy and ethereal pieces. It’s the kind of music you can listen to while working, writing, meditating, triggering ASMR or just to help you sleep. All of the tracks are at least 7 minutes long (the longest being just under 20 minutes) which makes it perfect for calming background use or falling asleep to.

This album is aimed more at ‘general’ fans of atmospheric ambient music (as opposed to filmmakers) although the tracks will be available for licensing if you’re interested. I’ve had feedback from people who like the sound of my royalty free music albums but understandably don’t want to pay for licensing when they just want to listen to it for pleasure. So I’ll be writing lots more ‘regular’ albums that will be priced more in line with standard albums for non-industry music fans.

Tracklisting:

1. Alpha State Begins (9:05)
2. Pushing Through Crystal Ice Clouds (14:32)
3. Planetfall (8:00)
4. Gravity Waves (8:38)
5. Descending Node (7:01)
6. Orbital Drift (10:17)
7. Binary Storm (7:05)
8. Panoramic Light (9:55)
9. Cold Methuselah (7:04)
10. The Divine Realm (19:42)

The album is available now from my store (link below) and also on iTunes, Amazon, Spotify etc. The lovely cover image comes courtesy of artist and photographer Sarah Fenwick at www.sjfbetty.com and I knew it was the perfect image for the album cover as soon as I saw it.

http://www.thebluemask.com/music-tracks/cryosleep-dreams/

Also available from:

Amazon
Bandcamp
Google Play
iTunes
Spotify

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Horror Movie ‘Silent Retreat’ Features My Music

One for you horror movie fans, new film Silent Retreat from director Ace Jordan features some of my dark atmospheric music. Watch the trailer above and find out more info below.

“Six members of a media company go on a weekend business retreat at an isolated lodge in the woods. When one of the members goes missing, they discover that the lodge was formerly a private mental institution that had been shut down after allegations of devious misconduct. One by one, they fall victim to the dark secrets buried at the lodge.”

You can visit the film’s official website here or see the social media links below:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/tSilentRetreat

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SilentRetreatMovie

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Stark0tube

IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3563892/fullcredits

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Android Puzzle App ‘Binary Challenge’ Features My Ambient Space Music

Binary Challenge game featuring my ambient space music

Here’s a cool new puzzler app for Android devices that features some of my ambient space music to help keep you focused while playing! Binary Challenge is a techy brain-game with a cool hi-tech look where you have to solve binary and hex numerical challenges. One for the more scientifically-minded!

It’s a free download from the Google Play store and comes from the awesome team at Increatly. Give it a try at the following link or just search for Binary Challenge on the Play store:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.increatly.binarychallenge

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Dakotalapse Full Length Time Lapse ‘Trails End’ Featuring My Music

Trails End - 4K Ultra HD

This is the latest time lapse film from photographer Randy Halverson at dakotalapse.com called Trails End. It’s a video compilation of some of Randy’s best time lapse photography from 2014.

The main music used in the clip above isn’t mine (although the intro/ending title music is my track Lightscape from my Royalty Free Vol.8 Collection) but he also has a full length version that runs to 30+ minutes long which features my music throughout the entire video.

I have to say that the photography in the 30 minute feature is absolutely mesmerizing and I’m honoured that my music is featured in this beautiful film. It’s well worth 30 minutes of your time to see some of the incredible photography in this video. You can download the full version shot in 4k Ultra HD from Randy’s website here:

http://dakotalapse.com/2015/04/trails-end-uhd-4k-time-lapse/

Randy has also used lots more of my music in his previous time lapse video work which you can see here on my site.

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New Orchestral Track ‘Awakening’ Added

Awakening by composer Simon WilkinsonJust added to the site is a new orchestral music track called Awakening. The track is an epic piano-led orchestral instrumental aimed at film and documentary makers looking for atmospheric music for their videos and trailers.

Starting with a simple piano riff, the tracks builds to an epic orchestral arrangement with strings and brass at 2:48.

The overall feel is inspirational and powerful with a slightly darker tone, ideally suited for personal stories or subjects of social uprising (e.g. Occupy protests, financial  events or human rights issues).

You can listen to the track or immediately license it for your project here:

http://www.thebluemask.com/music-tracks/awakening/

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EU VAT Tax Laws 2015 (VATMOSS)

EU VAT tax laws 2015 (VATMOSS)On January 1st 2015 a new European tax law (the snappily-titled “place of supply rules for digital services” aka VATMOSS) was quietly ushered in with virtually nothing in the way of publicity.

Despite apparently having been planned by the EU since 2008, publicity about the change has been virtually non-existent, meaning only a tiny fraction of small businesses affected are even aware of it yet.

The change in law affects the way VAT (Value Added Tax) is applied to sales of digital products to all customers in countries within the European Union. Sounds riveting I know, but please stay with me – it may affect you if you buy music, ebooks, software, apps etc. online!

What’s changed?

In short, the new law says that digital products (e.g. music or spoken word mp3s, ebooks, software, apps, pdfs, craft patterns etc.) sold to customers within the EU must now have VAT added at the rate of the country where the customer normally resides. So if you’re an EU resident, I now have to charge you VAT at your country’s rate and then pay this on to your country’s tax department every quarter.

Previously this would have been taxed at the rate where the business was located. It seems obvious that the primary thinking behind the change was to put a stop to multi-national businesses (such as Apple/Amazon etc.) from setting up headquarters in low-tax countries. In essence this sounds like a good thing, and certainly something I support in principle, especially in light of the recent levels of tax avoidance from big businesses!

But the law has been implemented in such an unworkable one-size-fits-all blanket fashion that it’s penalising and killing the smallest of businesses (often known as micro-businesses and usually run by one or two people on miniscule operating budgets – and yes, this includes me!)

Before you run to get your violins out in mock sympathy, let me explain it isn’t just a case of admin burden in collecting and paying taxes to 28 countries that’s the problem (although that’s certainly another thing to put on the list). If it were simple enough to implement then it wouldn’t be a problem.

But there are no thresholds to differentiate huge multi-nationals between 16 year olds selling mp3s from their bedroom-run websites, pensioners selling knitting pattern pdfs, or 1-man businesses like mine who operate on tiny budgets. We don’t have budgets to pay for accounting departments to monitor and handle multiple tax rates and invoicing or technical teams who can implement geolocation, country-specific websites, EU-specific servers and data management to store the evidence safely for 10 years. If I had the resources of Amazon I’d be more sympathetic!

The law change was apparently supposed to provide “a level playing field” for all businesses yet it’s proving to be unworkable for many who are unable to adapt their systems and keep up with the requirements. There are a huge range of issues that have already forced many micro-businesses to close down for fear of being audited at any time by any one of 28 EU countries who can fine you up to unlimited penalties. Not to mention shouldering the cost of paying for technical solutions to cope with these new demands.

In actual fact, one way to avoid the hassle of collecting VAT is to sell your products through a third-party marketplace (such as… Amazon) so in effect it will drive even more business their way! The level playing field now starts to look more like a monopoly.

What are the problems?

One of the most difficult requirements comes from identifying and proving which country is the customer’s usual place of residence before the sale is processed. As soon as you enter my site I’m supposed to be able to determine where you normally reside, work out the tax rate of your country and apply it to the products you see for sale in my shop (as well as storing all this information for 10 years in case any country’s tax department wishes to investigate me).

Sellers now need to collect 2 pieces of non-conflicting evidence (e.g. your home address, bank address, phone number, computer’s IP address) and check that these match up before allowing the sale to go ahead. So I now have to ask my customers to fill in their address at the checkout when I have no need or wish to ask for this information. Previously you could just enter your name and email and that’s all I needed but now I have to be able to prove which country I make my sales to, so I have to ask for even more info (which in itself will cause customers to drop off at checkout).

It’s common knowledge to most web-literate users that faking your IP address and location with browser plugins or VPNs is easy to do. Sometimes this is done in order to get around country-blocked content, other times for reasons of genuine privacy in a climate of big-brother suspicion. Either way, locating a user by their IP address is not something that can provide any form of accuracy, just a best guess – and anything involving the word ‘guess’ is generally not a good idea for tax purposes! And don’t even begin to try and take into account examples like being on holiday on a train heading from London to Paris using a Spanish-registered credit card…

This law is supposed to be followed by all websites worldwide selling digital product, but many sellers from countries outside the EU have already (and somewhat understandably) said they have no plans to be unpaid tax collectors for foreign countries at their own expense. The problem is that many outside governments have already agreed to this law, so they’re putting themselves at risk. It also puts me at a disadvantage because I’m complying (as best I can) and they aren’t – so my prices are higher to EU customers than others who aren’t going to bother charging tax.

How will it affect you as a customer?

I’ve had to completely update this website to be able to take account of managing tax, so now when you reach the checkout you’ll need to enter your address in order to make a purchase. If you’re an EU customer you’ll also see VAT added at the rate of your country. I apologise that I have to ask for your address details and to add VAT for EU countries. If there was a sensible threshold in place I wouldn’t have to do either of these things (note: sales to UK customers are unaffected and won’t be charged VAT as HMRC are allowing UK businesses to keep our threshold for domestic sales).

One unfortunate side-effect that you might see on other websites is that some businesses are now refusing to sell to anyone in the EU because of the problems it creates for them. If you’re an EU customer trying to buy digital products, you may well find you’ll be blocked at checkout by some companies. This is a ridiculous situation to be in 2015 and puts ecommerce back by about 15 years!

There’s a whole lot more detail as to why this is unworkable and problematic but I’ll stop there and point you to a few links to explain it better. Also, if you’re an EU customer unhappy about the changes, please contact your MPs, MEPs and your government and explain why.

There are many of us micro-businesses who have grouped together to try and get sensible changes put in place using Twitter, Facebook and various petitions. But at the moment the EU commission is refusing to admit there is a problem. Because we’re small operations, there’s little incentive for them to take any notice of us as long as bigger businesses pay their taxes. But without the ability to grow and flourish at small level, many micro-businesses won’t have the room to expand, so the only choices you might end up with are a handful of huge corporations!

Links:

EU VAT Action
http://euvataction.org/

EU VAT Action Facebook Campaign Group
https://www.facebook.com/groups/euvataction/

Definitive Guide To The New EU VAT Rules
http://blog.sitesell.com/2014/12/definitive-guide-new-eu-vat-rules.html