I learned about it from a recent Twindrills fanbox post. It seems like a new music distribution service named Big Up allows international users to publish their work on spotify etc without having to censor the name and design of the voicebank they're using (thus allowing to mention "hatsune miku", "kasane teto" "vflower" etc in the name of the release)
it also allows to have cover arts using the character for the album/EP
they have a list of all the voicebanks they allow available here: BIG UP!
The website is available at BIG UP!, for non-japanese producers, they have the option to use Paypal to receive money rather than a japanese bank account.
Those are the terms when it comes to the revenue split.
when they talk about use of the names, they mean that it is forbidden to just title a song "Teto" or to just title a song "Kagamine Rin"
To credit the voicebank and enable the revenue split, you will need to set the voice as a featured artist when publishing.
You can do so like this. It is also possible to set the vocaloid as the main artist, in this case it would end up credited as
"Hatsune Miku (Composer name)" for instance (putting the name of the composer in parentheses)
This is how it appears once a song is published (here it's apple music, kilda was the guitarist I credited too in the featuring artist category)
it also allows to have cover arts using the character for the album/EP
they have a list of all the voicebanks they allow available here: BIG UP!
The website is available at BIG UP!, for non-japanese producers, they have the option to use Paypal to receive money rather than a japanese bank account.
Those are the terms when it comes to the revenue split.
when they talk about use of the names, they mean that it is forbidden to just title a song "Teto" or to just title a song "Kagamine Rin"
To credit the voicebank and enable the revenue split, you will need to set the voice as a featured artist when publishing.
You can do so like this. It is also possible to set the vocaloid as the main artist, in this case it would end up credited as
"Hatsune Miku (Composer name)" for instance (putting the name of the composer in parentheses)
This is how it appears once a song is published (here it's apple music, kilda was the guitarist I credited too in the featuring artist category)
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