Digital Culture
YouTube

YouTube's Creator Music marketplace will finally enable creators to license pop music

The Creator Music library will make YouTube a leader in music licensing.
By Elizabeth de Luna  on 
A line drawing of a YouTube site page, with blue squares representing thumbnails and a little red square with a music symbol on it representing the Creator Music library.
A Creator Music library will make YouTube a leader in licensing for creators. Credit: YouTube

YouTube creators' music woes many finally be coming to an end. For more than a decade, creators have struggled to soundtrack their videos with anything other than instrumental or stock music and still make money. If they wanted to use a pop song — popular or not — they'd have to do so knowing that all the revenue from their video would go to the rights holder for that track.

Today, Sept. 20, at its inaugural "Made on YouTube" event(opens in a new tab), YouTube announced Creator Music, a new marketplace for creators to browse and license music with clearly defined terms and rates all spelled out. They can also elect to share revenue with music rights holders.

A screenshot of the Creator Music site where creators can search music by genre and artist and by top revenue sharing tracks.
A screenshot of the Creator Music site where creators can search music by genre and artist and by top revenue sharing tracks Credit: YouTube

The marketplace is free to use, much like YouTube's longstanding but outdated Audio Library, which offers free stock music and sound effect options to creators from within the Creator Studio.

It's a huge step forward in a content creation landscape that has evolved faster than copyright laws have been able to keep up with it. Creator Music is in beta in the U.S. and will expand to more countries in 2023.

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Elizabeth de Luna

Elizabeth is a culture reporter at Mashable covering digital culture, fandom communities, and how the internet makes us feel. Before joining Mashable, she spent six years in tech, doing everything from running a wifi hardware beta program to analyzing YouTube content trends like K-pop, ASMR, gaming, and beauty. You can find more of her work for outlets like The GuardianTeen Vogue, and MTV News right here(opens in a new tab)


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