I’ll make technologists a deal, I’ll give up my song copyrights if you give up your software patents. Software patents are even less unique than your typical song. So this should be easy right?
Is called FOSS, free open-source software, and it's various permutations. Is working pretty well from what I've seen, albeit not necessarily from the 'feed my children on creative efforts alone' front.
I'm not sure if it's a fair thing to say typical software code is less unique than typical song -- actual coding is a hell of a lot more involved than a lot of music playing, from what I've seen. 'tis an aside, though, heh.
However I think there could be an internet solution involving having free listening/previews with paid downloads for personal copies instead of mass-media advertising influencing which artists are known to the public.
Bandcamp? Bandcamp. Pretty sure there's a few others doing the same/similar. Your solution is a thing done, so we're already collecting data points on how effective it is.
As for the more general discussion, I'm of the opinion that copyright should be doing what it was actually intended to do -- which
isn't protect the creator's right to copy, that's just how copyright goes about doing what it means to do. That is to say, incentivise the creation of new creative works. Which roughly translates to a
much freaking shorter time limit, say ten to twenty years at most, for profitization of a particular creative work, after which the work becomes public.
None of this riding a single success for lifetime silliness -- copyright duration that gives a creator no incentive to succeed more than once or twice is as (or at least nearly as) damaging to creative content creation as no copyright whatsoever, imo.