Zanoise Talent

Unlock income from your recorded performances

We help artists, producers and labels collect neighbouring rights royalties for recorded music that is broadcast or publicly performed — worldwide.

What are neighbouring rights?

When recorded music is broadcast, streamed, or played in public spaces, performers and producers are entitled to royalties — separate from composer or publishing income.

Because the rules differ per country and per society, this income is often only partially collected — or missed altogether.

Who we work with

We work with performing artists, ensembles, producers and labels — from individual musicians to established international rights holders.

Our clients trust us to manage neighbouring rights with care, accuracy and long-term perspective.

How Zanoise supports rightsholders

Registration & eligibility:
We assess where you are entitled to neighbouring rights income and ensure registrations are accurate and complete.

Metadata & repertoire management:
We structure and maintain the repertoire data societies rely on — reducing errors and lost income.

International royalty collection:
We coordinate claims and collections across multiple territories, while keeping oversight centralised and transparent.

Learn more about neighbouring rights

Our knowledge base explains the essentials in clear language, with practical guidance for artists, producers and labels.

Not sure where you stand?

Many artists and rights holders only discover missed neighbouring-rights income years later.

A short conversation can already clarify whether action is needed.