A question has been raised via PM that has me scratching my head looking for solutions.
All of the above rules of course are aimed at popular music. The question raised is what to do if somebody wants to draft a composer such as Mozart (I think modern composers might be even more probelmatic for several reasons), who of course never recorded his own music, really was mostly jsut a songwriter, and yet has a definable catalog covered by thousands of entities worldwide.
Possibilities include:
1) just say nope, this is a Performing Artist draft, can't do composers
2) focus on the release/recording aspect, which would rule out pre-recording era composers. Classical music could then be acquired by drafting "The Mormon Tabernacle Choir" or some other group who had performed and released the piece in question, same as any other cover song.
3) allow composers as some sort of special case, the difficulty then being in defining what is a composer and how does that differ from a popular music artist writing a song that goes on to be sung by another -- under pop music rules that is the performing artist's song, not the songwriter's. Under classical music rules, the composer is the key, not the performer. Get around this by focusing on who performed it first? But then there still would not be an original "Mozart" recording to draft, just an infinite set of covers which otherwise belong to other artists/entities.
For how many people would the resolution of this question matter -- i.e. how many of you had thoughts of drafting classicla music or composers?