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Your treading on very dangerous ground
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No you're not, not in a realistic sense....maybe in a theoretical sense.
The standard protocal for anything the MPAA, RIAA, or whoever-elseAA finds to be in violation of the copywrite is to send a DMCA to the hosting provider. They will then ask you to remove the file. That's what happens 99.999% of the time.
Considering these organizations can do nothing to stop Torrent, old school P2P, and Latvian mafia groups you are not a target.
The biggest problem here is the beaucracy is more expensive than the actual copywrite losses.
If it were me and this was really important to me I would fake the mechanical lisence and get the school to host the file...not because I'm that dirty, but because the excessive red tape is the cause of the problem and not the solution.
The other idea is host the file elsewhere and maybe you can talk your school to linking to it. This removes all risk for them (it is WAY more likely that there will be a school shooting than any negative repurcussions from this).
I do remember reading about the possibility that you can not get a hold of the person in charge in "All You Need To Know About The Music Business" but I can't remember what it said.
Brandon