You can't. It is a right that the writer owns. You can offer to buy the copyright.
If you are not the composer of the song then you can NEVER take the copyright as yours; you would have to purchase it from the copyright owners. Also, when the copyright expires, 50 or more years after the author's death (or after publication, depending upon circumstances and national laws) it is no longer copyrighted at all and nobody can possibly own the copyright.
does you tube have all copyright laws for a song
No, song covers are not copyright free. Covering a song without permission from the original copyright holder can lead to legal issues.
Take Off - Chipmunk song - was created in 2010.
Dozens, if not hundreds. Every time you create something new, it is automatically protected by copyright. Doodle a picture of a cat, you have copyright. Take a picture with your phone, you have copyright. Record yourself making up a song, you have copyright.
That would be copyright infringement if the original song was protected.
You can only copyright a song if you are the song's author. You can't copyright someone else's song. Although the author can sell you their copyright.
Take-off - Vivid song - was created on 2010-07-08.
Try looking at Roger Glover's song 'The Mask' That might be what youre looking for.
Without a license, yes. That is assuming you did not personally compose, perform and record the song yourself, or take a public domain composition and perform and record it yourself, either of which would mean you own the copyright on those recordings and it would not be copyright infringement to use the recording of the song any way you like.
When you take a song off of your iPod, you get back the space the song originally filled in (a song is not a gigabyte, but a few megabytes).
Abba performing Take A Chance On Me. (C) 1977 Polar Music International AB