DwightMcCann wrote in post #4688371
I am not a lawyer. My rule of thumb is that if used for editorial work such as reviews in publications then it is fair use. If used by the talent themselves then copyright or right of publicity takes care of itself. I think in this particular type of scenario you are more concerned with the right of publicity which is the right, under state laws, to control how your image is used. It is what keeps me from selling prints of my images on the internet.
I am not a lawyer either. However, during the course of getting my Master's in Journalism, I did take Mass Communications Law. So, there are clearly more qualified people to pass this info along.
However, there are a few things to keep in mind.
Dwight is correct - photography for use in editorial work (i.e. news, informational purpose) is generally exempt from appropriation. Appropriation is an individual's right to protect their name, likeness, image, etc. from being used for commercial purposes without consent. Basically, you can't sell your image for *profit* without consent of the artist. However, if you were to be contacted by the New York Times about purchasing an image to run alongside a story that would convey news, sell away. You're making money, but in a news-conveying capacity, not as a purely for-profit venture.
With regards to taking their pictures as a whole, what occurs in public is never an invasion of privacy. If you're standing naked on a street corner, I take your picture, and it ends up on the front page of a paper, you will never win a lawsuit against me because gave up your right to privacy when you decided to walk outside naked. So, if a band played a concert in a park where anyone could walk up and view them, I'm pretty sure (not 100%) that you can snap away with little legal implications. However, if a band plays a concert where you have to buy a ticket, I'm not sure if that then creates a private place situation, even thought anyone with the money to buy a ticket can attend.
Either way, if the band sticks an agreement in front of you before you shoot and you sign it, you're bound by whatever terms are on that piece of paper.
As for the band owning the work because it's their likeness, if you're selling something that's not exactly a picture of Michael Jackson but invokes his image, he'd probably win. Even if the work is reminiscent of the artist but not an actual likeness, they win lawsuits. Vanna White won a lawsuit v. Samsung because they ran an ad of a ROBOT standing next to a game board with letters on it. The court ruled it was close enough to Vanna's likeness.