Welcome to Music Enterprise Worldwide’s weekly round-up – the place we ensure 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.
This week we noticed a serious escalation of the strain between US music publishers and Spotify, which started when Spotify determined to scale back mechanical royalty funds to publishers by declaring its Premium paid subscription to be a “bundled” service.
The Nationwide Music Publishers’ Affiliation (NMPA) has now despatched a strongly-worded letter to Spotify, alleging the streaming service is violating copyright with unlicensed use of lyrics, music movies and podcasts. Spotify responded by calling the letter “a publicity stunt stuffed with false and deceptive claims.”
Whereas publishers struggle Spotify, Sony Music Group is preventing AI builders. The corporate despatched a letter to 700 AI corporations, plus some streaming platforms, declaring that it’s “opting out” of getting its IP used to coach AI, and strongly suggesting these AI corporations could have already violated its copyrights.
In different Sony information, the corporate’s publishing division has inked a deal to accumulate the whole track catalog of Kevin Parker, the inventive pressure behind Tame Impala.
We additionally realized this week that customers of the Udio AI-driven music-making platform are creating 10 new songs per second(!).
Lastly, we obtained official phrase from Harmony that it’s pulling out of the race to accumulate Hipgnosis Songs Fund, leaving Blackstone because the main (and solely) competitor for HSF.
Right here’s what occurred this week…
1) MUSIC PUBLISHERS THREATEN SPOTIFY WITH LEGAL ACTION OVER LYRICS, PODCASTS, MUSIC VIDEOS
Music publishers look like on the verge of suing Spotify, alleging that the platform is infringing their copyrights via the widespread use of unlicensed musical works.
MBW has obtained a sternly worded authorized letter from the US-based Nationwide Music Publishers’ Affiliation (NMPA), despatched to Spotify Wednesday (Might 15) on behalf of NMPA members.
Amongst different issues, the letter accuses Spotify of not acquiring licenses for the usage of lyrics on its platform. The NMPA calls for in its letter that any unlicensed lyrics, music movies, and podcasts accessible on Spotify “be faraway from the platform or Spotify will face copyright legal responsibility for continued use of those works”.
The battle comes amid an ongoing dispute between Spotify and NMPA-led publishers over the streaming service’s choice to scale back mechanical royalties by declaring its predominant Premium paid service a “bundle” beneath Copyright Royalty Board guidelines.
Spotify fired again in opposition to the NMPA‘s claims of copyright infringement, calling them “a press stunt stuffed with false and deceptive claims”…
2) THE TRAIN HAS LEFT THE STATION: AI MUSIC PLATFORM UDIO IS ALREADY SPITTING OUT 10 SONGS A SECOND
Is the music business actually prepared for the flood of music made by/with AI that may play out over the course of 2024?
You may need already heard of the astonishing quantity of tracks being created on companies like Boomy – the place 19.5 million songs have been generated to this point.
This 12 months’s ‘huge noise’, AI-music-wise, has come from two new startups: Suno and Udio, each of which seem to provide music with an apparent, ahem, affect from world-famous copyrighted materials.
Udio, whose different traders embrace will.i.am and UnitedMasters, is attracting important consideration: it’s reported that over 600,000 individuals examined the platform out in its opening two weeks of public availability.
However that’s not the standout stat from a latest Bloomberg article masking the expansion of Udio and Suno. That is: On common, Udio’s customers are actually creating ten tracks a SECOND on the platform…
3) CONCORD OFFICIALLY PULLS OUT OF HIPGNOSIS SONGS FUND ACQUISITION RACE
Harmony has formally pulled out of the bidding warfare for the belongings of Hipgnosis Songs Fund.
The information was introduced in a press release to the market on Thursday (Might 16), and follows Harmony’s preliminary declaration on Might 9 that it wouldn’t be rising its supply for HSF – leaving international funding big Blackstone because the frontrunner within the high-stakes takeover battle for HSF.
The bidding warfare for HSF began in the midst of April, when Harmony, through Harmony Refrain Ltd, launched a gap bid of $1.40 billion or $1.16 per share, triggering a counteroffer by Blackstone of $1.50 billion.
The bidding warfare continued till Harmony declined to counterbid a Blackstone supply of $1.572 billion, or $1.30 per share…
4) TAME IMPALA’S KEVIN PARKER SELLS COMPLETE SONG CATALOG TO SONY MUSIC PUBLISHING
Sony Music Publishing has acquired the whole track catalog of Australian singer-songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Kevin Parker of Tame Impala fame.
The settlement expands their current partnership, which started in 2009.
In 2020, SMP signed a publishing take care of Parker to cowl worldwide illustration of his future songs. The brand new deal now covers each Parker’s current assortment of songs and his future works, SMP stated on Wednesday (Might 15).
“The concept of passing on possession of my songs is one which I don’t take into consideration very evenly, in any respect. They’re the fruit of my blood, sweat and creativity over all of the years I’ve been a recording artist and songwriter thus far,” stated Parker…
5) SONY MUSIC SENDS LETTERS TO 700 AI, MUSIC STREAMING COMPANIES DECLARING IT’S ‘OPTING OUT’ OF AI TRAINING
Sony Music Group (SMG) is within the strategy of sending out letters to what MBW understands to be 700 AI builders and music streaming companies, declaring that it’s “opting out” of getting its content material used within the coaching of AI.
Any AI developer who desires to make use of SMG’s content material will want specific permission. The letter, obtained by MBW, additionally states that these corporations could have already violated Sony Music’s copyrights.
“Because of the nature of your operations and revealed details about your AI methods, now we have motive to consider that you simply and/or your associates could have already got made unauthorized makes use of (together with TDM [text and data mining]) of SMG Content material in relation to the coaching, growth or commercialization of AI methods,” states the letter.
Sony’s declaration went dwell the identical week the corporate reported $2.50 billion in income for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. That quantity was up 14.7% YoY…
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