Paul McCartney, U2 and Eric Clapton joined thousands of other musicians Thursday in an appeal to the British government to extend the copyright protection on their recordings in that country.
The performers took out a full-page advertisement in the Financial Times newspaper calling for ``fair play for musicians,'' in response to a report recommending that the government maintain its current laws granting copyrights on sound recordings and performers' rights for 50 years.
That falls well short of the 95-year copyright protection that exists in the United States, and the recording industry fears that British artists could see their work exploited in their lifetimes.
Some of the Beatles catalog could be up for grabs for compilation releases beginning in 2012, including early hits like Love Me Do.
But Andrew Gowers, the author of the government-commissioned report on intellectual property, said that extending the copyright beyond 50 years would have only benefited ``an exceptional few stars, who are already fabulously rich.''
Other signatories to the advertisement, which included 3,500 record companies and 40,000 performers, were conductor Simon Rattle and opera singer Kiri Te Kanawa.
Keith Harris, a spokesman for Phonographic Performance Ltd., the organization that collects and distributes royalties, said, ``Extending copyright term is not just about superstars demanding special treatment as it is sometimes portrayed, it is about performers at all levels -- many of them barely earning a living wage -- being treated fairly under the law.
