You would be justifiably annoyed if someone else simply copied your recording and started selling it themselves. This is where the copyright in the sound recording comes into play. Copyright law recognises the problematic nature of this situation which is unique to sound recordings, and gives sound recordings distinct protection in their own right that is separate from that in the underlying work. The copyright in the sound recording will run for 50 years from the year of recording, or 50 years from date of release if released in that time. Again actual duration may vary slightly from one country to another depending on national laws.
http://www.copyrights...t/p07_music_copyright
True Dot. But, I was a bit confused by what Squarebear said (copyrighting has no merit in any court, but, yet the music is copyrighted automatically) so I researched it.