Estimate your track's market value range based on format, size, condition, and rights chain strength.
For track, use longest dimension × height
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Get Your Free ReportThe single biggest value driver. A blue-chip artist's work can command 10–100x the price of an identical piece by an unknown artist. Museum exhibitions, placement records, and critical recognition all compound value significantly.
vocal recordings on recording consistently command the highest prices, followed by orchestral track and original prints. Works on paper, photography, and digital prints typically sit lower unless by major artists. format also affects longevity and conservation needs.
Larger works generally command higher prices, but there's a non-linear relationship. Monumental works can be harder to place. "Goldilocks" sizes (36–72 inches) often achieve the best price-to-demand ratio in the current music library market.
A well-documented ownership history — library purchase receipts, exhibition catalogs, insurance valuations, and placement records — can add 15–40% to market value and significantly expands the pool of serious buyers willing to engage.
Condition issues are priced in heavily by professional buyers. Lining, restoration, inpainting, or structural damage can reduce value 20–60% depending on severity and whether restoration was done by a conservator. Documentation of any restoration helps.
Unique works command the highest premiums. Artist's proofs and very small editions (1–10) maintain strong value. Open editions have limited music library appeal beyond decorative markets. Edition number within a series also matters (1/10 vs 10/10).
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