The Collective Voice of Music Creators
The Recording Academy represents the voices of all music creators. We fight for fair compensation, protect creative rights, and ensure policymakers hear from the people who actually make music.
As the only membership organization representing all music creators with no corporate members, the Recording Academy has a unique responsibility and vantage point. Our advocacy work spans federal legislation, state policy, regulatory proceedings, and international trade, always guided by one principle: the people who create music deserve to be fairly compensated and protected.
Our current policy agenda is focused on four critical areas where creators' rights are most at risk and where legislative action can make the biggest difference.
Our Focus Areas
Music Creators Need
A Voice in Washington
The Grammy organization is the only membership organization that represents all music creators and no corporate members. For more than 25 years, our Advocacy & Public Policy team has fought at the federal, state, and local levels to protect creators' rights, secure fair compensation, and ensure that the people who make music have a say in the policies that affect their livelihoods.
From landmark legislation like the Music Modernization Act to fighting for AI transparency and fair radio royalties, the Grammy organization turns grassroots energy into real policy change.
25+
Years of music advocacy in D.C.
12
Chapters mobilizing creators nationwide
4
Major bills signed into U.S. law
Why Advocacy Matters to Creators
“
My song plays on the radio hundreds of times a week. I get paid by streaming, by satellite, by internet radio. AM/FM? Nothing. That's not right.
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“Going to Capitol Hill and sitting across from my senator, explaining how AI deepfakes threaten my voice and my livelihood, that changed everything for me.”
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“The AMP Act meant that for the first time in history, my work as a producer was recognized in copyright law. That happened because Academy members showed up.”