No, but any sound recording of a performance of Grieg's music may still be copyrighted according to when it was created and the laws of the country where it was produced.
For example, in the USA, any recording published prior to 1972 is copyrighted until 2067 when state copyright laws become preempted by federal copyright.
The owner of a copyright in music has the exclusive right to perform the work
The music industry relies on copyright protection to sustain itself.
Gesine Hagerup and she was a pianist.
copyright 1962 by Regent Music Corporation. copyright renewed by Jewel Music Publishing Co. Inc.
maybe because it has really bad stuff in it or the music is copyright
There is no minimum age for copyright protection.
The book has a copyright. The music has a copyright. The musical production has copyright. The movie has a copyright. The sound track has a copyright. Music not used in the movie has copyright. The play was first produced on Broadway in 1957, meaning it is copyrighted until 95 years later. The movie was produced in 1962 and has 95 years of copyright. The sound recordings of the music produced prior to 1973 have no federal copyright but are protected by state laws until 2067, not including those works that were also part of the 1962 dramatic audiovisual work, which are covered by federal copyright for 95 years.
no .
Not unless you make a recording of it and publish it without permission of the copyright owner, assuming the music is copyrighted.
Copyright infringement is found mostly in music, photography, and movies. It's hard to say which has the greatest.
Rockland Music and You Look Good Music.
Rondor Music.