In the early 1930s, composers of Yiddish song, as well as Jewish music publishers and Yiddish Theatre composers, were generally excluded from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). These composers saw their songs being performed live in such settings as the
Borscht Belt, as well as being recorded and played on the radio, without receiving any royalties. Composer and bandleader
Alexander Olshanetsky, who is credited with proposing the founding of the Society, complained that composers couldn't make enough to survive on royalties and were forced to work as theatre managers or booking agents on the side. In February 1932, the founding group of composers hired lawyers Joseph Steinberg and E. Edward Moscowitz to draft a constitution and register the Society of Jewish Composers, Publishers and Songwriters based on ASCAP's model. Secunda and the lawyer Moscowitz approached Yiddish radio stations, hotels, and wedding halls, and signed some contracts to get royalties for their music. In 1940,
Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI) was founded as a competitor to ASCAP; it was less restrictive than ASCAP, and the Society was able to join it and have BMI collect royalties on their behalf in exchange for a fee. ASCAP tried to entice Sholom Secunda, whose
Bei Mir Bistu Shein made him the most lucrative member of the Society, to join them. He eventually declined, fearing his departure would kill the Society. In the postwar era, with a gradual decrease in Yiddish record and sheet music sales, the Society's importance declined as well. After 1954 its former members who were still actively composing, including Secunda, joined ASCAP. ==References==