In a move that has sent ripples through both pop culture and music policy circles, Olivia Rodrigo has chosen the song for her forthcoming wedding. The track, a deeply personal ballad from her latest album, is set to be performed at the ceremony this summer. While the choice is hers alone, it comes at a moment when the British music industry is pushing for a seismic shift in how transatlantic royalties are calculated, a reform that could reshape the economics of songwriting for a generation.
Rodrigo, who has been a vocal advocate for artist rights, has selected "Lacy" off her sophomore record, "Guts." The song, a delicate ode to admiration and envy, is said to reflect her journey with fiancé Adam Faze. But beyond the romance, this decision inadvertently highlights a systemic issue: under current UK-US royalty arrangements, songwriters on this side of the pond often receive a fraction of the earnings that their American counterparts do. The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) and the Music Producers Guild have been lobbying for a 'reciprocity clause' that would ensure British artists are compensated at US rates when their songs are played stateside.
Take a typical streaming scenario. An American listener spins "Lacy" on Spotify. Under the current framework, the songwriter's mechanical royalty (paid per stream) is set by the US Copyright Royalty Board, which has historically been lower than the UK's. But performance royalties (paid when the song is played on radio or in public) are calculated differently. The US performance rights organisation (PRO) pays British writers at a rate that is often a third less than what American writers receive in the UK. This 'trade deficit' in music has cost the British industry an estimated £50 million annually.
Rodrigo's wedding announcement has become an unintentional catalyst. The singer, who holds dual US-UK citizenship through her mother, has previously testified before Congress about fair pay for artists. Her choice of a British producer for the wedding track, and the fact that the ceremony will be held in London, has amplified calls for parity. "It's absurd that a British songwriter can write a global hit and see a fraction of the royalties from the biggest market in the world," said BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor. "Olivia's wedding song is a beautiful piece of music, but the real harmony would be a transatlantic royalty agreement that treats creators equally."
The proposed reform, known as the Transatlantic Mechanical Licensing Act, would standardise the rate per stream across both countries, based on a sliding scale that accounts for market size. It's a technical fix to a cultural quirk: how do you value a song that moves millions in New York but finds only modest audiences in Manchester? The answer, say experts, lies in a digital-first approach. "We need to tie royalties to consumption, not geography," explained Dr. Emily Carter, a music economics professor at Goldsmiths. "A stream in California should remunerate a British writer the same as a stream in Cornwall. The technology exists; the political will has lagged."
Rodrigo's camp has declined to comment on whether the wedding song will be released as a single, but industry insiders expect a wider push. If the 'Olivia effect' can mobilise fans and policymakers, the British music industry could see its biggest royalty reform in a decade. And for a singer who built her career on raw emotional honesty, perhaps that's the most fitting wedding gift of all.








