Welcome to Music Enterprise Worldwide’s weekly round-up – the place we make sure that you caught the 5 largest tales to hit our headlines over the previous seven days. MBW’s round-up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximize their revenue and scale back their touring prices.
A information report launched this week means that Sony Music, together with an unnamed accomplice, is in talks to purchase Queen‘s catalog (presumably each recorded and publishing rights) for an epic sum of $1 billion.
Talking of Sony, in a presentation on the firm’s annual Enterprise Section Assembly, Sony Music Group Chairman Rob Stringer unveiled an attention-grabbing proposal: He’s urging music streaming companies to begin charging a “modest price” for his or her ad-supported subscription tiers.
Elsewhere within the music enterprise, we obtained phrase this week that Okay-pop big HYBE offered a $50 million stake in rival firm SM Leisure. That’s noteworthy, given {that a} 12 months in the past HYBE misplaced a hard-fought battle towards Kakao Corp. for management of SM.
The information that the US Division of Justice has filed a lawsuit to interrupt aside Reside Nation and Ticketmaster continues to reverberate. In a brand new evaluation, MBW asks: Might Reside Nation win this battle? The brief reply is: sure, they may.
Lastly, MBW took a glance this week at who’s bankrolling Suno, the uncannily good AI music generator now reported to be price $500 million. It seems Suno’s buyers are predominantly from tech, and few have a music background.
Right here’s what occurred this week…
1) SONY MUSIC IN TALKS TO ACQUIRE QUEEN CATALOG IN POTENTIAL $1BN DEAL (REPORT)
Sony Music is reportedly in talks to accumulate the catalog of iconic British rock act Queen.
That’s in accordance with Bloomberg, which printed an article on Wednesday (Could 29) citing sources as saying that Sony is presently “working with one other investor” on a transaction that “may probably whole $1 billion”.
Information of Sony’s reported talks to accumulate Queen’s catalog arrives a 12 months after Music Enterprise Worldwide broke the information (in Could 2023) that discussions had been taking place between Queen’s representatives and sure firms over a possible $1 billion-plus catalog sale.
That catalog, we reported, mixed each publishing and recorded music rights, all collectively and equally owned by the band’s surviving ‘traditional’ line-up (Brian Could, Roger Taylor, John Deacon) plus the property of Freddie Mercury…
2) SONY MUSIC GROUP BOSS ROB STRINGER TALKS ACQUISITIONS, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND HOW MUSIC STREAMING SERVICES SHOULD START CHARGING FREE USERS
Sony Music Group Chairman Rob Stringer is setting his sights on a brand new monetization objective: Getting the music streaming companies to begin charging for his or her ad-supported subscription tiers.
Throughout his presentation at Sony Group’s annual Enterprise Section Assembly on Thursday (Could 30), Stringer urged that DSPs begin charging a “modest price” on their free subscription tiers.
“Whereas free tiers entice billions of month-to-month customers, their poor contribution to streaming monetization means their main goal is to transform customers into paying subscribers,” Stringer stated.
“At Sony Music, we predict everyone seems to be keen to pay one thing for entry to just about all the universe of music,” he added…
3) HYBE SELLS $50M STAKE IN SM ENTERTAINMENT
South Korea-headquartered leisure big HYBE has offered $50 million price of its shares in fellow Okay-pop firm SM Leisure.
That’s in accordance with a regulatory submitting printed by HYBE on Tuesday (Could 28), which signifies that the corporate has offered 755,522 shares of SM Leisure for 90,531 South Korean gained per share.
HYBE’s shareholding in SM Leisure has been decreased to 2.21 million shares on account of the transaction.
In line with the Korea JoongAng Every day, the shares offered by HYBE equates to a 3.2% stake in SM Leisure, decreasing HYBE’s stake in SM to 9.38%…
4) THE DOJ IS SUING TO BREAK UP LIVE NATION. WHAT EXACTLY DOES THE LAWSUIT AIM TO ACHIEVE – AND COULD THE CONCERT GIANT WIN?
After an 18-month investigation, the US Division of Justice has filed a civil antitrust lawsuit towards Reside Nation, proprietor of Ticketmaster, for what it says is “monopolization and different illegal conduct that thwarts competitors in markets throughout the dwell leisure trade.”
The DoJ went for the jugular, asking the US District Court docket for the Southern District of New York to order the break-up of the corporate, in order that Reside Nation and Ticketmaster would as soon as once more be two separate entities after spending 14 years underneath one company roof.
Authorized analysts say the truth that the DoJ, underneath then-President Obama, accredited the merger within the first place in 2010, and got here to a different settlement over alleged monopolistic practices in 2019, means it may have a tough time convincing the court docket right now that breaking apart Reside Nation/Ticketmaster is a mandatory treatment to the issues it alleges.
But the political atmosphere of our period is notably completely different from the Obama period. Reside Nation argues that the antitrust case towards it’s the results of the US authorities succumbing to a “populist urge” within the physique politic, and certainly we live via a populist period…
5) SUNO COULD GET SUED BY THE RECORD BUSINESS. WHO’S BACKING IT WITH $125M?
Information broke final week that AI music generator Suno has raised USD $125 million in a Sequence B funding spherical.
In line with sources cited by The Data, that provides the corporate an implied worth of $500 million. Not dangerous for a startup born simply two years in the past.
Suno is likely one of the most distinguished AI music technology platforms, able to creating full tracks that sound so convincingly like human-made music that it has reportedly unnerved even a few of its personal builders.
Under, we check out Suno’s buyers, their philosophies, and the opposite companies they’ve put cash behind. One factor jumps out: They’re predominantly from tech, and never from the music trade…
MBW’s Weekly Spherical-Up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximise their revenue and scale back their touring prices.Music Enterprise Worldwide