I'm a lil inbetween on this issue, but I'm leaning more towards that it should stay the same.
A contract can hold an artist for an average of 7 albums (some mandatory albums, and some options but if the artist is doing well it can take those options.) A album cycle normally takes between 18 and 36 months... The extreme case is that an artist can be bound to a record label for 21 years, basically their entire career (if they're lucky). The fact that it has a possibilty of being that long, and artist-label relations can turn sour over time, kind of sucks. But... a 7 year time limit would be horrible! That only gives time for the artist to put out like 2 or 3 albums, and normally artists dont do well in the first couple albums. This would make it hard for record labels to be recouped from the advances they give the artist. On average it takes sales of 250,000 and up for label to be recouped, how many new artists can do that right away? They need to cross-collaterization of several albums in order to recoup all their money. Since most artists can't recoup their money in 7 years, and under this statute an artist could walk out in 7 years, this would leave the music industry in trouble. If record labels loose money, they can't promote the artists...
So yeah 7 year statute is bad when it comes to record contracts, everything else is fine, just not this.