Songs by Adele, Bob Dylan, Green Day, Many More Blocked by YouTube in Legal Dispute

Songs by Adele, Bob Dylan, Green Day, R.E.M., Burna Boy, Rush and many others are currently unplayable on YouTube in the U.S. due to a legal dispute between the platform and the performing rights organization SESAC.

Attempts to play many, but not all, songs by those artists on Saturday met with the following message: “This video contains content from SESAC. It is not available in your country.”

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A similar dispute between Universal Music Group and TikTok raged on for several months earlier this year before being resolved.

Performing rights organizations, such as ASCAP, BMI and SESAC in the U.S., collect royalties and help protect copyrights on behalf of songwriters and music publishers. They have the ability to block public performances of music — which entails everything from streaming to radio to music played in restaurants — although they are laborious and difficult to enforce, even for a platform as large as YouTube, as evidenced by the seemingly scattered blockage of SESAC material on the platform at the moment.

Such blocks are legally complex and can involve other copyright holders (for example a live Green Day recording made by the U.K. broadcaster the BBC is currently available, suggesting a legal wrinkle), although it may also reflect the sheer volume of videos that must be blocked. Relatedly, certain songs performed by Beyonce, Nicki Minaj and other artists are also affected, presumably because they feature SESAC-affiliated songwriters.

Reps for YouTube Music and SESAC did not immediately respond to Variety’s requests for comment on Saturday, but the situation was addressed in response to a fan who contacted the TeamYouTube account on X (formerly Twitter).

“we hear you,” it reads. “our music license agreement with SESAC has expired without an agreement on renewal conditions despite our best efforts. for this reason, we have blocked content on YouTube in the US known to be associated with SESAC – as in line with copyright law.”

It responded to frustrated follow-up tweets from users by saying “we understand this is a difficult situation and our teams continue to work on reaching a renewal agreement,” and “we’re continuing our discussions with SESAC to reach an agreement, but do not have any exact dates for future updates yet.”

Such blocks are a common when a copyright organization and a broadcaster cannot come to terms on a licensing agreement, and usually do not last for more than a few days or weeks. However, one such dispute between YouTube and Warner Music Group, one of the largest music companies in the world, resulted in Warner pulling its videos from the platform for some nine months across 2008 and 2009 before terms were reached.

In the intervening years YouTube’s formerly contentious relationship with music companies has become much more positive, ironically after the company hired former Warner recorded music chief Lyor Cohen in 2016.

Additional reporting by Steven J. Horowitz

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