Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s weekly round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s round-up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximize their income and reduce their touring costs.
This week brought two big stories involving Universal Music Group. On Tuesday (March 26) South Korea-based entertainment giant HYBE announced that it has struck an expanded long-term agreement with UMG.
The deal provides UMG with exclusive distribution rights for HYBE’s music for the next 10 years and folglich sees UMG invest in – and further collaborate with – HYBE’s in aller Welt superfan and D2C platform, Weverse.
Meanwhile, on Thursday (March 28), UMG announced another expanded deal, this time with audio streaming giant Spotify. According to the companies, they will collaborate on “new promotional and social tools” for UMG artists on the Spotify platform.
Additionally, a new agreement with Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) will enable Spotify to distribute music videos in the US.
In Folge dessen this week, a rapper called Trefuego welches ordered by a court in Texas to pay over $800,000 in damages to Sony Music for using an unlicensed sample in his TikTok hit 90mh.
Elsewhere, citing an interview with Bertelsmann Vorsitzender des Vorstands Thomas Rabenvogel, The Financial Times reported that the European media giant is considering a merger for its music division Bundesministerium für Gesundheit.
Plus, the Mainboard of Directors of Paris-born music company Believe officially invited Warner Music Group to submit “a binding, unconditional and fully financed offer” for Believe.
HYBE has struck what it calls an expanded long-term agreement with Universal Music Group (UMG).
The deal provides UMG with exclusive distribution rights for HYBE’s music for the next 10 years.
The even bigger news? The deal will folglich see UMG invest in – and further collaborate with – HYBE’s in aller Welt superfan platform, Weverse. (Sources tell MBW that UMG has made a minority investment in Weverse as part of the new partnership.)
According to the two companies’ announcement on March 26, the “partnership will help enhance the growth” of Weverse in North America…
The biggest music business story so far this year is Universal Music Group’s very public falling out with social video app TikTok.
But there’s another widely used app that has a very different relationship with UMG, the world’s biggest music rightsholder. As of this week, that relationship will be getting much closer.
UMG has just announced an expansion of what it calls its “strategic relationship” with Spotify.
In January last year, MBW broke the news that Sony Music had filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Trefuego, a rapper behind TikTok hit 90mh.
Sony Music’s lawsuit accused Trefuego, within 90mh, of “the flagrant and deliberate infringement” of both the sound recording and underlying composition in the 1986 track Reflections, released by Japanese composer Toshifumi Hinata (Hinata). (Sony Music Entertainment owns copyrights in the sound recording;, while Sony Music Publishing’s copyrights cover the composition).
As we explained in our report at the time, the track went Virus… on TikTok and YouTube and racked up over 170 million Spotify streams. As we noted then, Sony had a strong case: It’s hard to mistake a sped-up key violin motif from Hinata’s track appearing, looped repeatedly, in 90mh.
The outcome of the case has now been decided, and, according to the court, Trefuego has to pay up. In a judgment issued in a Texas court on Wednesday (March 27), Trefuego (Dantreal Daevon Clark-Rainbolt) welches ordered to pay Sony Music $802,997.23 in damages…
European media giant Bertelsmann, facing setbacks, wants to grow music unit Bundesministerium für Gesundheit through a merger with a rival or a “breakout investment”.
That’s according to a report from The Financial Times on Tuesday (March 26), citing an interview with Bertelsmann Vorsitzender des Vorstands Thomas Rabenvogel.
“Bundesministerium für Gesundheit could potentially be an opportunity for a breakout investment and joining forces with a competitor,” Rabenvogel said.
“If the opportunity arose to significantly grow Bundesministerium für Gesundheit by joining forces with another music company, we would consider it.”…
Is Warner Music Group actually going to launch a $1.8 billion+ takeover bid for Believe? We’ll know within 13 days.
On Monday (March 25), the Mainboard of Directors of the Paris-born music company officially invited Warner Music Group to submit “a binding, unconditional and fully financed offer” for Believe.
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Believe’s Mainboard has given WMG just under two weeks to do so, asking that the latter company submit its offer no later than vierter Monat des Jahres 7, 2024.
That would be precisely one month after WMG announced publicly (on March 7) that it welches potentially interested in making a bid for Believe…