Music Biz Legal: Timbaland & RZA & Rodney Jerkins & NO I.D. & The Dream Sells Catalog to Hipgnosis Songs

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Mary J. Blige, Sam Smith Hitmaker Rodney Jerkins Sells Catalog to Hipgnosis Songs

By Variety Staff

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Hipgnosis Songs Fund has acquired the music catalogue of four time Grammy winner Rodney “Darkchild” Jerkins, who will also be joining the investment adviser’s advisory board with immediate effect. Hipgnosis has acquired 100% of Rodney Jerkins’ Writer’s Share of Income in his early works and 100% of his Publishing interest and Writer’s Share of Income in his later works, which in total comprise 982 songs.
Jerkins — a producer, rapper and songwriter — rose to prominence in 1997 having co-written, arranged and produced five songs for Mary J. Blige’s triple-platinum album “Share My World,” including the single “I Can Love You.” The following year he co-wrote and produced the majority of Brandy’s “Never Say Never,” album which has sold over 17 million copies worldwide, including the Grammy-winning smash single “The Boy Is Mine.” In the following years he co-wrote and produced three songs for Whitney Houston’s album “My Love Is Your Love”; co-wrote and produced Destiny’s Child chart-topping “Say My Name,” and two songs on the group’s final album “Destiny Fulfilled.” He continued to collaborate with Beyonce as a solo artist, as well as the Spice Girls, Michael Jackson, Sam Smith, Lady Gaga (the Beyonce collaboration “Telephone”), Jennifer Lopez, Justin Beiber, Toni Braxton and more.


https://variety.com/2020/music/news...ges-help-independent-music-venues-1234810628/

Merck Mercuriadis, Founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited and The Family (Music) Limited, said: “If you are talking songs of cultural importance you only need to say ‘Darkchild’ and everyone in the world knows you are talking about the very best of the very best. Rodney has created magic every step of the way in his magical career and we owe him a debt of gratitude for making the airwaves such a wonderful place over the last 25 years. I am delighted to welcome him to the Hipgnosis Family and our Advisory Board. Nile Rodgers, The-Dream, Dave Stewart, Giorgio Tuinfort, Starrah and I all look forward to his contributions.”
Jerkins said: “My relationship with Hipgnosis represents a relationship of mutual trust: Hipgnosis has placed its trust in me as an advisor, and I have entrusted Hipgnosis to manage a catalog that I have nurtured for 25+ years. I have no doubt that Merck and Hipgnosis are the right home for my catalog because they have demonstrated that they appreciate the art and craft that underlie the copyright and have constantly supported music creators. I’m thankful for the music that God has enabled me to develop these past 25 years, and I’m excited, inspired, and motivated for what the future holds in the next phase of my career.”
Hipgnosis Songs recently released its annual report, which showed its revenues soaring in its first full year of business, climbing to $81 million in the 12 month period ended in March 2020 from around $8.9 million in the preceding period. The firm, which has been on an unprecedented acquisition binge of hit songwriter and producer catalogs — been buying up catalogs by hitmakers ranging from Timbaland and Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart to Jack Antonoff and Jeff Bhasker — began trading on the London Stock Exchange in July of 2018. Between March 2019 and March 2020, the company spent nearly $700 million to acquire 42 catalogs.



In the report, cofounder and CEO Merck Mercuriades notes, “When compared with the three major song companies, we have achieved between 7% and 12.5% of their revenue on between 0.5% and 0.9% of their number of songs.” This is a result of the group’s highly selective investments, which he summarizes in the report thus: “All of our songs have a proven track record and we do not speculate on new songs regardless of the past performance of the songwriter, producer or artist. These proven hit Songs produce reliable, predictable and uncorrelated cash flows which are highly investible.”
 

 
HIPGNOSIS ACQUIRES 50% STAKE IN RZA CATALOG, INCLUDING WU-TANG, KANYE WEST SONGS
169SHARES
https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/region/us
AUGUST 24, 2020
BY TIM INGHAM
Hipgnosis Songs Fund is building up its ownership of timeless hip-hop catalog.
Earlier this month, we learned that the Merck Mercuriadis-led company had acquired a catalog from Kanye West and Jay-Z producer No I.D.
Today (August 24), Hipgnosis tells us that it has acquired a 50% stake in the music publishing catalog of Robert ‘RZA’ Diggs. (Like the No I.D deal, Hipgnosis has declined to announce a purchase price.)
RZA, founder member of the Wu-Tang Clan, has sold Hipgnosis a 50% stake in the copyright interest of 814 songs – including a 50% stake of both the writer’s share and publisher’s share of the catalog.
Between them, these songs have accumulated over 3bn streams, and include almost all of the full Wu-Tang Clan catalog, with RZA having co-written and produced close to the entirety of the hip-hop group’s albums.
Those albums include classic debut LP Enter The Wu (36 Chambers) from 1993, which is widely heralded as one of the greatest hip-hop records of all time, and an influence on artists such as Nas, The Notorious B.I.G. and Jay-Z.
RZA also co-wrote and produced successful solo albums for Wu-Tang members, including Tical by Method Man. Tical featured single All I Need, winner of the “Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group” at the 1995 Grammy Awards.
RZA also produced Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s album Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version, released in 1995. In addition, RZA produced Raekwon’s debut album Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… which featured Nas; GZA’s debut album Liquid Swords; and Ghostface Killah’s Ironman in 1996. All of these albums went Top 5 in the US.
RZA subsequently co-produced Raekwon’s sequential solo album Only Built 4 Cuban Linx…Pt. II with Dr. Dre among others
The second Wu-Tang Clan album Wu-Tang Forever was released in 1997, and debuted at No.1 in the US and in the UK. Having gone 4-times platinum in the States, it earned a Grammy Award nomination for “Best Rap Album” in 1998.
“RZA IS GLOBALLY RECOGNIZED AS A TRUE RENAISSANCE MAN OF HIP-HOP AND MOST WOULD ARGUE THAT HE IS THE G.O.A.T.”
MERCK MERCURIADIS, HIPGNOSIS
Wu-Tang’s third studio album The W was released in 2000, with fourth album Iron Flag following the next year. Other LPs to have emerged from the group include 8 Diagrams (2007), A Better Tomorrow (2014), Once Upon A Time In Shaolin (2015) and The Saga Continues (2017).
Outside of Wu-Tang Clan, RZA worked with Kanye West as one of the producers of his fifth studio album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, released in 2010 (RZA co-wrote and co-produced opening track Dark Fantasy, and performed on, co-wrote and co-produced So Appalled). He also worked on West and Jay-Z’s collaborative studio album Watch the Throne, for which he co-wrote/co-produced New Day.
RZA has released four solo studio albums, his first being gold certified Bobby Digital in Stereo in 1998.
This was followed by the first album’s sequel, Digital Bullet in 2001, and Digi Snacks in 2008 – both released under RZA’s alter-ego, Bobby Digital – as well as Birth of a Prince in 2003.
RZA was represented in the transaction by long-time manager Tyler Childs at Forward Artist Management and attorney Tim Mandelbaum at Fox Rothschild.
Merck Mercuriadis, Founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited and The Family (Music) Limited, said: “RZA and the Wu Tang Clan did not invent hip-hop but they took it from being fun to something that represented a true reflection of what the streets, and being black in America, was really like.
“They were and are the most authentic band and brand in hip-hop and it all starts with RZA’s vision, his songs and his struggle, manifested in music, that could show the entire world what was really going on. He is now globally recognized as a true renaissance man of hip-hop and most would argue that he is the G.O.A.T.”
RZA said: “I wear various hats in my artistic expressions but the one that has been so deeply reflective of my life’s journey is my songwriting. I’m honoured to partner up with Merck and the Hipgnosis team to usher my songs into an exciting future.”
Tyler Childs said: “Merck and Hipgnosis are true music people through and through. RZA and I are thrilled to partner with them on these songs and continue our long standing relationship with Merck.”Music Business Worldwide
 
Wu-Tang Clan Producer RZA Sells Catalog to Hipgnosis Songs

By Jem Aswad

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Hipgnosis Songs announced that it has acquired 50% of the copyright interest and writers share in the song catalog of Wu-Tang Clan’s primary producer, Robert “RZA” Diggs. He has produced nearly all of Wu-Tang Clan’s albums, as well as many of the multiple solo albums released by the group’s members.
The group’s enormously influential debut album, “Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers),” was released in 1993 and has been followed by a series of group and solo releases, including RZA-helmed hits by members Method Man, the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Raekwon, GZA’s and Ghostface Killah. He has also worked with Jay-Z and Kanye West, and released four solo albums of his own.
RZA was represented in the transaction by long-time manager Tyler Childs at Forward Artist Management and attorney Tim Mandelbaum at Fox Rothschild.


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Hipgnosis has acquired 50% of RZA’s worldwide copyrights, including publishing and writer share, in his Catalogue comprising 814 songs.
Merck Mercuriadis, Founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited and The Family (Music) Limited, said: “RZA and the Wu-Tang Clan did not invent hip-hop but they took it from being fun to something that represented a true reflection of what the streets, and being black in America was really like. They were and are the most authentic band and brand in Hip Hop and it all starts with RZA’s vision, his songs and his struggle, manifested in music, that could show the entire world what was really going on. He is now globally recognized as a true renaissance man of hip-hop and most would argue that he is the G.O.A.T.”
RZA said: “I wear various hats in my artistic expressions but the one that has been so deeply reflective of my life’s journey is my songwriting. I’m honored to partner up with Merck and the Hipgnosis team to usher my songs into an exciting future.”
Tyler Childs said: “Merck and Hipgnosis are true music people through and through. RZA and I are thrilled to partner with them on these songs and continue our long standing relationship with Merck.”
Hipgnosis Songs recently released its annual report, which showed its revenues soaring in its first full year of business, climbing to $81 million in the 12 month period ended in March 2020 from around $8.9 million in the preceding period. The firm, which has been on an unprecedented acquisition binge of hit songwriter and producer catalogs — been buying up catalogs by hitmakers ranging from Timbaland and Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart to Jack Antonoff and Jeff Bhasker — began trading on the London Stock Exchange in July of 2018. Between March 2019 and March 2020, the company spent nearly $700 million to acquire 42 catalogs.
In the report, Mercuriadis notes, “When compared with the three major song companies, we have achieved between 7% and 12.5% of their revenue on between 0.5% and 0.9% of their number of songs.” This is a result of the group’s highly selective investments, which he summarizes in the report thus: “All of our songs have a proven track record and we do not speculate on new songs regardless of the past performance of the songwriter, producer or artist. These proven hit Songs produce reliable, predictable and uncorrelated cash flows which are highly investible.”
 
Hipgnosis Songs Acquires Timbaland Catalog

By Jem Aswad

0
Courtesy of Disney
The fast-rising Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited continues its aggressive growth surge, acquiring a catalog from songwriter-producer-artist Timbaland that comprises 108 albums and songs.
Timbaland is one of the most successful songwriter-producers in the hip-hop/R&B realm: The catalog includes hits by Justin Timberlake, Missy Elliott, Aaliyah, Jay-Z, Nelly Furtado, 50 Cent, Madonna, 2Pac, Rihanna, Drake and many others.
Timberlake’s albums, all of which include significant Timbaland contributions, have sold “an aggregate” 32 million copies globally, according to the announcement, and include such smash singles as “SexyBack,” “My Love” and “What Goes Around…Comes Around.” Furtado’s “Loose” album has sold more than 12 million copies globally and includes the hit singles “Promiscuous” and “Maneater.”


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Timbaland’s solo efforts include his platinum 2007 album “Shock Value,” which includes the hits “Give It to Me” (featuring Timberlake and Furtado) and “The Way I Are.”
Hipgnosis cofounder Merck Mercuriadis said: “Ask any of today’s greatest creators who their biggest influences are and the one name that appears on everybody’s list is Timbaland. His iconic records with Aaliyah, Jay Z, Missy Elliot, Nelly Furtado, and Justin Timberlake amongst many others are iconic and will be remembered forever.”
Timbaland said: “Merck is a visionary who I know appreciates the value of my musical life work. My music is in great hands.” His manager, Gary Marella, said: “It’s important to all creators that their work is in the right hands. Merck’s respect for music creators is unparalleled. We are pleased to have part of Tim’s iconic catalogue with Merck and Hipgnosis.”
In August, Hipgnosis raised $62.8 million — which, combined with the initial $265 million it raised before the company debuted on the London Stock Exchange last July, and an additional $185 million it raised earlier this year, put the company above $500 million raised to date.
Sources tell Variety that Hipgnosis is on the verge of making a major production rights deal — a trend that was profiled in Variety earlier this week — and Mercuriades said recently that the company is in the process of staking a foothold in the U.S. by acquiring a pair of Los Angeles-based publishing companies, although he declined to reveal which ones.
Founded by Mercuriades and Chic cofounder Nile Rodgers, the company has acquired full or partial stakes in the catalogs of many songwriters who have enjoyed multiple global hits, including The Chainsmokers, Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart, The-Dream, Tricky Stewart, Poo Bear, the late Chic co-founder Bernard Edwards, Johnta Austin and Sean Garrett. Its holdings now include more than 6,000 songs worth more than $1.3 billion, it recently told investors
 
HIPGNOSIS
Who owns HIPGNOSIS? how many millionaire is it that have come together to do such a thing?This is another way of controlling a failing business structure ,let's buy up all of these niggas shit and live for many generations to come.

I would rather hold on to my shit and pass it down than take a buyout and that $$$ be blown but some spoiled relative in less than a decade of so.

And I wouldn't want no Jews or white cac to have control over my work or our work....take Coolio's shit
 
Who owns HIPGNOSIS? how many millionaire is it that have come together to do such a thing?This is another way of controlling a failing business structure ,let's buy up all of these niggas shit and live for many generations to come.

I would rather hold on to my shit and pass it down than take a buyout and that $$$ be blown but some spoiled relative in less than a decade of so.

And I wouldn't want no Jews or white cac to have control over my work or our work....take Coolio's shit

Mercuriadis

Mercuriadis is the founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited, a music IP investment company. In a 2019 interview with the journal Thought Economics, he said: "I have always believed that hit songs and music, art in general, has real value to it.

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Hipgnosis Songs Fund[edit]
Main article: Hipgnosis Songs Fund
Mercuriadis is the founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited, a music IP investment company. In a 2019 interview with the journal Thought Economics, he said: "I have always believed that hit songs and music, art in general, has real value to it. What people don’t really recognise is that when a song becomes a proven song, the earnings pattern to it becomes very predictable and reliable, and is therefore investable. And these songs are as valuable as gold, or oil."[33] The company raised more than US$300 million to fund the acquisition of copyrights in June 2018, and began trading on the London Stock Exchange as SONG in July. Its first acquisition was a majority stake in The-Dream's 302-song catalogue, which included hits such as Justin Bieber's "Baby", Beyonce's "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" and Rihanna's "Umbrella." It has since acquired 100% of the Poo Bear, Tricky Stewart, TMS and Giorgio Tuinfort catalogues, as well as a stake in the catalogue of Chic co-founder Bernard Edwards.[34]

Hipgnosis Songs Fund has raised nearly £862 million to fund acquisitions since it was established in 2018.[35] At the close of its first full year as a publicly traded company, its catalogue totaled more than 5,000 songs; of those, approximately 2,000 had been #1 hits somewhere in the world, and 4,000 had reached the Top 10.[36] Five songs co-owned by Hipgnosis Songs Fund appeared in the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 of the decade chart.[37] In July 2020, it was reported that the Hipgnosis music rights portfolio, consisting of approximately 13,300 songs, had been independently valued at more than £760 million.[38][39] In August 2020 its market cap valuation exceeded £1BN.[40]
 

About Hipgnosis Songs // The Family Music

About Hipgnosis Songs Fund Limited
Hipgnosis, which was founded by Merck Mercuriadis, is a Guernsey registered investment company established to offer investors a pure-play exposure to songs and associated musical intellectual property rights. The Company has raised a total of over £625 million (gross equity capital) through its Initial Public Offering on 11 July 2018, and subsequent issues in April 2019, August 2019 and October 2019. In September 2019, Hipgnosis transferred its entire issued share capital to the Premium listing segment of the Official List of the FCA and to the London Stock Exchange’s Premi’s Premium segment of the Main Market.
About The Family (Music) Limited
The Company's Investment Adviser is The Family (Music) Limited, which was founded by Merck Mercuriadis, former manager of globally successful recording arUsts, such as Elton John, Guns N' Roses, Morrissey, Iron Maiden and Beyoncé, and hit songwriters such as Diane Warren, JusUn Tranter and The-Dream, and former CEO of The Sanctuary Group plc. The Investment Adviser has assembled an Advisory Board of highly successful music industry experts which include award winning members of the arUst, songwriter, publishing, legal, financial, recorded music and music management communiUes, all with in-depth knowledge of music publishing. Members of The Family (Music) Limited Advisory Board include Nile Rodgers, The-Dream, Giorgio Tuinfort, Starrah, Nick Jarjour, David Stewart, Bill Leibowitz, Ian Montone, Rodney Jerkins, Bjorn Lindvall and Chris Helm.
 


The Man Who’s Spending $1 Billion to Own Every Pop Song
Music mogul Merck Mercuriadis raised hundreds of millions of dollars to buy the rights to hits by Taylor Swift, Timbaland, and Bruno Mars. Is he insane?
Matt Hendrickson
Jan 8·14 min read


Inside the office on the second floor of music industry mogul Merck Mercuriadis’ off-white townhouse in the posh London neighborhood of Notting Hill, there is shit everywhere. Hundreds of vinyl records are piled in shelves, while others are stacked 20 deep on the floor. A Michell Engineering turntable worth more than $10,000 is still wrapped in plastic on a card table. There’s a mound of CDs teetering next to two signed copies of English rock singer Ian Hunter’s recent memoir, one of which will go to Morrissey, whom Mecuriadis managed for several years. An original 1969 pressing of the only album by the German group Organisation, a precursor to Kraftwerk, is finally on its way, after Mercuriadis — who also managed Elton John and Axl Rose in a former life — spent almost 40 years tracking it down. “I don’t believe in material things. I always wear black, and I don’t have a car,” he says. “But I’ll gladly pay 400 quid for a record.”

Which is why on this cool, late-fall day in mid-November, Mercuriadis is going record shopping — again. On his way to the seminal London record store Rough Trade, only a few short blocks from his house, with his bare head and stocky frame he could easily be mistaken for a Greek mobster. But today his mode is more tour guide as he spits out questions like quarters from a slot machine: “What’s your favorite band?” “Do you have a holy grail of a record?” Across the street, in the gray townhouse, he tells me, is where Brian Eno lives. There’s the Globe, a Jamaican-inspired dance club that the Clash loved. The Tabernacle, a venue where Pink Floyd — Mercuriadis’ all-time favorite band — used to play.
He walks into Rough Trade and ducks behind the counter. “Merck and Elton are our best customers,” says Sean, the store’s buyer. Now down to business: the records.

“There’s a Fontaines DC 12-inch,” Sean says.
“I need that,” Mercuriadis replies.
“A Madonna remix 12-inch?”
“I need that.”
“Cate Le Bon?” Mercuriadis looks at Sean incredulous.
“Do I look like I want a Cate Le Bon record?” Sean chortles.
A clerk tallies up the 25-odd albums. As he waits, Mercuriadis thumbs through another stack of vinyl, stopping to look at the cover of Taylor Swift’s latest, Lover.
“Should I add that too, Merck?” Sean asks with a sly grin.
“No,” Mercuriadis answers. “I already own 10 songs on it.”

Music royalties are the ultimate intellectual property (IP) game. Depending on who owns the copyright to a song, be it the composer, publisher, recording artist, or anyone else who may have been involved, they get paid every time someone wants to use their IP. Though valuations of the major labels are currently at an all-time high — they generated $14 billion in 2019 alone — between iTunes and Spotify, the past 20 years have been volatile for them. Royalties, however, have been the one constant, viewed as the safe long-term play: No songs, no hits, no money. Now private equity firms, institutional investors, and high-profile managers want in on it, too. In recent years, billions of dollars have flooded the music business to invest in the catalogs of songwriters.
The eye-popping dollar amounts Mercuriadis is paying have caused much consternation in the C-suites of major labels and publishing houses. “Fuck that guy. What he’s paying is obscene,” says one publishing exec.
Mercuriadis has entered the scene as the industry’s most aggressive and audacious buyer. In 2017, the former music manager launched Hipgnosis Songs Fund, which raised nearly $1 billion to snap up the publishing rights of some of the biggest songwriters in music today. Unlike other major publishing houses that spend time and resources developing undiscovered talent, Mercuriadis is focusing solely on investing in proven songs, ones that have already generated strong ROIs but have potential for much more. His logic is that by owning a handpicked number of songs, Hipgnosis can be more strategic and nimble in finding new ways to monetize them, whether it’s with TV, ads, or other merchandise. “We turn down 70% of what’s offered to us, and oftentimes we make the first move in finding writers whose catalogs aren’t publicly for sale,” he says.


In less than three years, Hipgnosis has purchased nearly 7,500 songs, more than 1,000 of which have been number one hits. Mercuriadis has done eight-figure catalog deals with the writers of five of the songs in Billboard’s Top 10 of the Decade: Bruno Mars’ “Uptown Funk,” co-written by Jeff Bhasker; Ed Sheeran’s “Shape of You,” co-written by Johnny McDaid (also the song with the most streams in Spotify history); the Chainsmokers’ “Closer”; Maroon 5’s “Girls Like You,” co-written by Starrah; and the Latin crossover smash “Despacito” from Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee, and Justin Bieber, co-written by Poo Bear. Hipgnosis has also acquired catalogs of hip-hop icon Timbaland, Jack Antonoff (Taylor Swift’s co-writer on Lover), and Shawn Mendes’ collaborator Teddy Geiger. In late December, Hipgnosis announced its acquisition of Savan Kotecha’s catalog, the songwriter behind Ariana Grande.

Mercuriadis is interested in cashing in on the past, too. His fund has also purchased the catalogs of legends like Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics and one of Mercuriadis’ closest friends and management clients, Nile Rodgers. (Rodgers’ credits range from his own classics, such as “Good Times,” to the Sugar Hill Gang’s pioneering hip-hop track “Rapper’s Delight” to Daft Punk’s multiplatinum “Get Lucky.”) Mercuriadis is now working on closing his biggest deal yet: acquiring the entire catalog of one of the music industry’s most iconic female artists and songwriters from the past 50 years.
The eye-popping dollar amounts Mercuriadis is paying have caused much consternation in the C-suites of major labels and publishing houses, entities that historically have ruthlessly fought against change. “Fuck that guy. What he’s paying is obscene,” says one publishing exec, who, like the 15 other industry sources contacted for this story, declined to comment on the record. In the music industry, paying for assets at a 10x multiple is considered top dollar. Mercuriadis is reportedly paying up to 20x, making it impossible for others to compete. “Executives from major publishing houses are by nature very acquisitive,” says Mark Mulligan, one of the industry’s most respected analysts and head of the London-based research firm MIDIA. “They’re walking away from deals because they can’t figure out how to make the numbers work with the multiples that are being paid.”
What Mercuriadis is doing with Hipgnosis isn’t so much innovative as it is opportunistic. With a fertile contact list from his decades as an artist manager, the ability to raise at least another billion from investors, and a healthy amount of hubris, he located an opening in the music industry and is going all-in on exploiting it. Ultimately, his goal with Hipgnosis — which went public on the London Stock Exchange in June 2018 — is to own 15% to 20% of the overall publishing market. “Everyone that writes songs today can be confident that the financial community understands that as these songs become proven, they are predictable and reliable,” Mercuriadis says.
Unless, of course, they’re not.

When Mercuriadis was eight, an older cousin arrived from Greece to live with his family in Nova Scotia and brought with him a stack of records. “He knew everything about girls, he knew everything about drugs, and he knew an awful lot about music,” Mercuriadis says. “And I become interested in all three of those things.”

In 1982, determined to find a job in the music industry, he called the Toronto office of the then-upstart label Virgin Records every day for months until it hired him in the marketing department. But after three years at Virgin, Mercuriadis was itching to work on the artist side of the business. He moved to London to join Sanctuary Music, a rapidly expanding management firm whose initial client was the British heavy metal band Iron Maiden.
Mercuriadis became infatuated with maintaining Iron Maiden’s career after years of creative upheaval between its main songwriter and its lead singer. He endeared himself to them with his passion for the music, as well as his rapidly evolving marketing skills. For the launch of the band’s 1992 album, Fear of the Dark, Mercuriadis flew dozens of journalists, radio disc jockeys, and label personnel to London. The guests were ferried by double-decker buses to a site where an elaborate indoor casino and carnival set had been built, complete with pinball machines, card dealers, and extravagant food. The band played only one song. “It was surreal. I had one journalist say to me, ‘I feel like I’ve won an MTV contest,’” recalls Ellyn Solis, who at the time was the band’s publicist at Epic Records. “It had to have been six figures.” Afterward, while the guests partied in the hotel bar, Mercuriadis printed out the next day’s itinerary and went to every room and slid the paper under the door. “He’s like the Pied Piper. Everyone follows him because he has such a creative passion for what he does,” Solis says. “He’s a true music and artist guy, and he’s always one step ahead of everyone else.”

Mercuriadis launched Hipgnosis Songs Fund in 2017, which raised nearly $1 billion to snap up the publishing rights of some of the biggest songwriters in music today.
In 2000, Mercuriadis moved to New York to become the president of Sanctuary Music’s North American office. By this time, Sanctuary was a publicly traded company, and Mercuriadis was charged with developing a record label and publishing arm in addition to growing the management roster to eventually add Beyoncé, Elton John, and Axl Rose. Rose was still toiling on Guns N’ Roses’ sixth album, the long-delayed Chinese Democracy. But as the album’s release date continued to be pushed back, Sanctuary started hemorrhaging money in 2004, coming up woefully short on meeting revenue expectations and laying off a good portion of the company’s staff. Sanctuary was eventually sold two years later to Universal Records for $41 million. A manager’s single greatest skill is protecting their artists. After Sanctuary’s dissolution, most of Mercuriadis’ management clients left him, a rare setback for a man so committed to his artists and their art. “I definitely felt like a failure,” he admits.

When Spotify launched in 2008, Mercuriadis became intrigued by streaming music. Central to Spotify’s user experience was the ability to create personalized playlists by culling songs from all genres and artists. The start-to-finish thread of a full album was becoming less important to streaming adopters. In decades past, he observed, the majority of artists wrote their own songs. Kurt Cobain wrote all the lyrics and much of the music for Nirvana’s 1991 album, Nevermind. Contrast that with Adele, who worked with 10 different songwriters for her 2015 smash, 25. “It became clear to me that the power was shifting from the artist to the songwriter,” Mercuriadis says. “But the songwriters weren’t in a position to reap the benefits.”

Today, the music industry is in the midst of an arms race to tap the next song and artist who rockets into the pop culture. Columbia Records has thrown millions at Lil Nas X for “Old Town Road” and Arizona Zervas for his song “Roxanne,” both of which first exploded in 2019 on the video-sharing social app TikTok. A forward-thinking manager can find new ways to grow his clients’ reach. Take Moe Shalizi, who landed his EDM client Marshmello 10 million users when he played a virtual concert inside the world of the wildly popular video game Fortnite.
In 2018, he launched Hipgnosis Songs Fund with a head-turning acquisition: $23.75 million for a 75% stake in The Dream’s catalog — the songwriter behind hits like Rihanna’s “Umbrella” and Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It).”
Despite the wellspring of fresh moneymaking opportunities for artists, Mercuriadis recognized that the structure of the music business has largely remained the same for the songwriter. Artists make most of their money by touring and selling merchandise, while the songwriter has access to none of that. But shouldn’t they? After all, it was the songwriter who gave the artist material to tour behind.

“I liken the music industry to an oil tanker,” says Vickie Nauman, who serves as an adviser to firms looking for a piece of the publishing market. “And there’s all these speedboats zipping around the ship trying to get it to alter course with new technology or ideas. But as history has shown, that oil tanker takes a long time to turn.”

With Hipgnosis Songs Fund, Mercuriadis bypassed all of them. Songwriters are able to generate revenue from three sources: mechanical royalties (the sale or legal download of a song), performance royalties (paid every time a song is heard in public, whether it’s a live performance, on TV, or in a movie; played in a bar or restaurant; or streamed), and synch fees (song licensing for use in movies, video games, and commercials). Mechanical royalties are the only stream with a set rate; performance and synch royalties are negotiated percentages. Synchs are often more lucrative for the songwriter, since they generally split 50% for the writer and the artist, with the label taking its cut from the artist’s piece of the pie. Synch is where Hipgnosis Song Fund could make them money, as Mercuriadis explained to the 177 hedge fund and private investors he pitched between 2015 and 2018.
Soon after launching, Mercuriadis made his first head-turning acquisition: $23.75 million for a 75% stake in The Dream’s catalog — the prolific songwriter behind hits like Rihanna’s “Umbrella” and Beyoncé’s “Put a Ring On It.” “He told me I could be the next Quincy Jones and laid out the plan. How can you not listen to him?” says The Dream (whose real name is Terius Youngdell Nash). “I’m recruiting people all the time.”
“He told me I could be the next Quincy Jones and laid out the plan. How can you not listen to him?”
Today, the business operates like a cross between an investment fund and a talent management agency. While Mercuriadis brokers the catalog deals, each of his 19 employees is responsible for monetization opportunities for a portfolio of songs. He plans to at least double the number of people working for him this year. “I want to get rid of the word ‘publishing,’” he says. (His preferred description: “song management.”) “Major publishers have small staffs working with hundreds of thousands of songs. We’re shooting for thousands of songs and having synch managers who are each responsible for a much smaller amount,” he says. “We’ll make a lot more money than anyone else.”

Plenty of artists are happy with their current publishing deals. But don’t think for a moment that songwriters aren’t seeing the fat checks Hipgnosis is cutting and pushing their managers to get a meeting. In 2017, the attorney for Justin Beiber’s songwriter Poo Bear cold-called Mercuriadis. After a few meetings, Poo Bear backed out of a different publishing deal. “I didn’t know who he was, but for Merck, it’s music, music, music, all of the time,” says Poo Bear, who has since sold Hipgnosis every song he’s written up until July 2018. “As an artist, I want to work with people that are as passionate about my songs as I am.” As for his future works? “I wouldn’t do a deal like that with anyone else other than Merck.”

It’s 11 a.m. and champagne is circulating around a stuffy conference room at the London Stock Exchange. It’s the day after Mercuriadis’ record-shopping spree, and he’s here to celebrate the upgrade of Hipgnosis’ stock to a premium listing. Mercuriadis took Hipgnosis public in 2018. The stock gained nearly 10% value in its first year; in the six-month period ending on September 30, Hipgnosis’ profit increased from $4 million to $15.5 million. With the upgrade, Hipgnosis is now open to a whole new breed of investors beyond institutional. It’s also validation of Mercuriadis’ operating theory — that songs can be viewed as a measurable uncorrelated asset class akin to gold, diamonds, or oil—entities sheltered from the swings of the market. “I think that in due course other people will be saying, ‘I need to be in songs,’” he says.


Mercuriadis and Nile Rodgers celebrate the upgrade of Hipgnosis’ stock to a premium listing at the London Stock Exchange. Photos: Dan Wilton
But none of this is guaranteed. Streaming revenue is strong today, but it could be more idiosyncratic than analysts predicted; emerging markets such as China and India are paying pennies on the dollar compared to mature markets. Interest rates could climb, forcing Hipgnosis to burn more cash. And Jimmy Iovine recently told the New York Times that unlike streaming video companies that generate their own content, the streaming music market is commoditized, since they all have access to the same music.

Then there’s the math around proven hits: There are only so many catalogs of songs with a stellar track record available to purchase, and even then, the future streaming revenue figures generated by catalog songs over time remains murky. Eighty-eight percent of current streaming revenue is from songs that were released in the past 10 years. “The Beatles are the fourth-biggest band for Universal in terms of revenue, but the amount generated from streaming is minuscule,” says industry researcher Mulligan.

Meanwhile, skeptics think the sky-high multiples Hipgnosis is paying make it incredibly risky. In December, Warner Music closed a $650 million deal with private equity firm Providence to acquire publishing rights. The deal is structured so that Providence assumes most of the investment risk with Warner, initially offering only administration and marketing expertise, having an option to buy in at a later date. “Warner is one of the most educated buyers in the market, and they are letting private equity write the checks and take the risk,” says Matt Pincus, who sold his publishing company Songs to Kobalt Capital’s fund for a reported $150 million in December 2017. “Why would they do that if they thought pricing was rational?”

Pincus acknowledges that Hipgnosis may have other deals in the works that would offset the high prices he’s paying — and indeed, Mercuriadis is working on diversifying beyond songwriter catalogs. The company just purchased the masters of UK band the Kaiser Chiefs, which gives it complete ownership of the recordings. Purchasing producers’ rights is another new point of emphasis. Mercuriadis bought Jeff Bhasker’s inventory (the Grammy’s 2016 Producer of the Year behind “Uptown Funk”), along with the entire 1,855-song output from Brendan O’Brien, best known for his work with Pearl Jam. There are also the merchandising possibilities: Mercuriadis’ yet-to-be-announced mega-deal with that iconic female artist reportedly includes, in addition to the thousands of songs the artist has written, the use of her image and likeness. This deal will cost Mercuriadis well into the nine figures but has the potential for him to eventually sell more T-shirts than the Gap.

Many of Hipgnosis’ hedge fund and private investors argue that something catastrophic would have to happen for the company to stumble. “Honestly, the only thing that concerns me is if Merck suddenly died,” says Mitchell Humphries, manager of an investment fund for the Church of England. “But I’m sure he’s thought of a contingency plan already.” (Indeed, the 55-year-old has: Three members of the company’s advisory board and its chairman would run things.)

Later that evening, after the London Stock Exchange celebrations, Mercuriadis heads to Abbey Road Studios, where he keeps a small office above it. Music from the recording session downstairs drifts into the room as he unbuttons his jacket and sinks into the leather couch with a giant exhale. The packed day of events is just a precursor to what Mercuriadis is planning next: to raise as much as three billion dollars over the next year. Along with owning a bigger chunk of the publishing market, he wants to continue altering it. He’s considering launching a songwriter’s union, something akin to the Screenwriters Guild, that would give songwriters more leverage to extract better deals from the industry’s power brokers. “What makes the music business wrong is when executives start to believe that they’re more important than the artists,” Mercuriadis says. “I’ve never gotten to that place.”

 
HIPGNOSIS ALREADY OWNS OVER 5,000 SONGS – WITH ANOTHER $1BN-PLUS OF DEALS IN ITS SIGHTS
558SHARES
https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/region/gb
JUNE 24, 2019
BY TIM INGHAM
Merck Mecuriadis & Nile Rodgers, Abbey Road Oct 2018 (Credit: JF)
Hipgnosis Songs Fund Ltd floated on the London Stock Exchange little under a year ago – and it’s been one of the biggest talking points of the global music industry ever since.
The company raised £200m ($265m) for that initial IPO, and has since spent the lot on publishing and songwriter catalog acquisitions. Indeed, it raised another £142m ($185m) for further acquisitions two months ago.
Today, we have received an important update on exactly how this money is being spent – and how Hipgnosis is performing as a result – within the firm’s first ever annual results.

It reveals that Hipgnosis, which was founded by veteran artist manager Merck Mercuriadis (pictured with client Nile Rodgers) acquired 12 catalogs in the period between June 8, 2018 and end of March 2019 for a total of approximately £120m ($153m): The-Dream, Poo Bear, TMS, Tricky Stewart, Giorgio Tuinfort, Bernard Edwards, Itaal Shur, Rico Love, Sean Garrett, Johnta Austin, Ari Levine and Sam Hollander.
This run of acquisitions comprised 3,096 songs, while that £120m cumulative pricetag “represented a blended acquisition multiple of 12.75x historical three year average net income”.
In positive news for Mercuriadis and his investors, the value of this catalog has already grown significantly. Says the report, “The fair value of the portfolio as at 31 March 2019 was £128m, reflecting an increase in the fair value of the Portfolio as determined by the Independent Valuer of £8.7m.”
In total – including that (June ’18 – March ’19) financial period plus the subsequent three months – Hipgnosis says that it has acquired no less than 5,891 songs (see below). Over 1,000 of these came with the buyout of the Dave Stewart catalog, announced last month.

The report reveals: “[Since] IPO, the company has acquired, or entered into exclusivity agreements to acquire, catalogs with a total value of £387m, which represents an aggregate multiple of 12.56x annual net income.”
Hipgnosis says that it expects to have spent its remaining capital, excluding any leverage, by the end of July 2019, which would take its total spending comfortably above £340m (approx $433m) over the course of its first 13 months of trading.
You can expect another raise soon, then – and a big one. As the report points out: “We now have a pipeline of catalogs with an aggregate value in excess of £1 billion.” (For US readers, the current-day equivalent of over $1.3bn.)
In terms of total revenues in the financial year period (June ’18-March ’19), Hipgnosis turned over net revenues of £7.2m.
It says that publishing income in this period increased by 9% when compared to the portfolio’s performance in the year prior to acquisition (based on data obtained during the respective catalog due diligence processes), driven mainly by an increase in synchronisation and streaming income.
As an example, Hipgnosis notes that the Bernard Edwards catalog achieved over $512,000 in gross sync placements in April 2019. “In relation to The-Dream’s catalog we have taken a single Song from $7,000 in total earnings in 2018 to $125,000, from synchronisation alone, in calendar year 2019 to date,” it adds.
The firm’s net revenues include an accrual of £1.9m for performance income, to account for the songwriter’s share of performance royalties which are subject to a significant time lag in reporting in the industry, but which the company is entitled to receive in due course.
Operative net assets as at 31 March 2019 was £208.8m, representing an operative net asset value (“NAV”) per share of 103.27p, up 4.6% on 30 September 2018

Some 64% of the portfolio’s revenue in the fiscal year was generated in the USA. Another 15% came from the UK, with an increase in revenue from other developed and emerging market countries now expected.
You can download the full Hipgnosis Songs Fund Ltd annual financial report through here.Music Business Worldwide
 
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How a Wildly Ambitious Company Called Hipgnosis Is Shaking Up the Music Industry
BYWILL SCHUBE
Oct 08, 2020
Merck Mercuriadis
Merck Mercuriadis’ vision is simple. He wants to disrupt the music publishing industry so completely that it ceases to exist in its current capacity. By turning the focus from song creation to song management, Mercuriadis and his team at Hipgnosis Songs Fund aim to frame music royalties as an asset class, not unlike gold or silver. They’re already a publicly traded company on the stock market in the U.K., and they’re eyeing Wall Street in the next 18 months. Merck Mercuriadis, who Kanye West calls one “of the most powerful and knowledgeable people in music,” wants Hipgnosis to get rich, but he also wants it for his artists, and for you, too. The difference, though, between music as an investable asset and anything else, is that songs are more stable, simply because music is the most predictable commodity available (according to Mercuariadis anyway).
Hipgnosis is, at its core, a test to see if songs can function as investments, similar to the way oil, gold, and publicly traded companies do. For instance, the song acquisition investment company recently purchased 50 percent of RZA’s catalog, which totals half the copyright interest of 814 songs. This includes 50 percent of both the writer’s share and the publisher’s share. And because RZA was a co-writer on so many Wu-Tang solo albums, Hipgnosis will also see money from the catalogs of artists like ODB, Raekwon, and GZA. The group has made other forays into the hip-hop world, including buying 100 percent of No I.D.’s catalog. This includes 100 percent of writing shares, so for Hipgnosis’ undisclosed and presumably large investment, they’ll now receive the income every time a song with a No I.D. credit appears in a film or on TV.
For those bristling at the capitalistic intrusion of art, Mercuriadis positions himself as the least offensive operator. He’s a manager of songs and artists, not prospective ideas. But many questions remain as the fund continues to turn heads with its exorbitant spending and Mercuriadis’ outsized personality. Can his group really change the way the industry deals with royalties? Will the risk of equating new hits with old classics hurt the Fund? And, most importantly, how will the US market respond when the U.K.-born company brings their hypothesis for a greater, more equitable industry stateside?

Who is Merck Mercuriadis?
Born and raised in Quebec, Mercuriadis got his start as a marketing director at Virgin in Canada before shifting into music management as a co-founder of the now-legendary Sanctuary Records. His work with Morrisey, Ozzy Osbourne, Elton John, and Nile Rodgers established Mercuriadis as a force in the industry. In 2018, Hipgnosis emerged with a flourish, as the company raised a total of over $807 million through its Initial Public Offering on July 11 of that year. Though it emerged on the public market in the UK in 2018, the company first began when Mercuriadis left Sanctuary in 2006.
What does Hipgnosis do?
In music publishing, companies buy catalogs from labels and oversee the way intellectual property is used on television, in films, and on the web. Hipgnosis wants to deal directly with artists that own their own masters, because labels often gain control by preying on young artists desperate for cash advances and a legitimate record deal. Mercuriadis and his group prefer to buy catalogs from artists, because purchasing catalogs directly from the source gives artists the ability to make the decision for themselves. Once Mercuriadis’ team secures the contract, all royalties will be paid out to them, at which point, if the song is successful, the group’s share price will rise and investors will cash in. Essentially, Mercuriadis is betting that songs are impervious to the market’s fluctuations, and that songs are forever. While most companies hire writers to then collaborate with other artists in hopes of scoring some part of the royalty (or buying catalogs from labels), Hipgnosis is focused on managing songs that are already proven entities. Mercuriadis outlines the difference as song creation versus song management.
What makes Hipgnosis different?
“The reason why so many artists don't have their rights is that they've been seduced by the advance and are therefore compromised on what they are doing,” explains Mercuriadis. This discussion and debate has gained serious traction as artists like Kanye West and Megan Thee Stallion have spoken out against the leverage labels use when offering artists rich advances in favor of masters or control. “You can look at Hipgnosis and say, ‘Okay, but hold on Merck, you buy these rights from songwriters and producers and artists, so are you sure you got this right?’ And my response to that is to say, ‘Absolutely.’ Because I only buy from artists and songwriters and producers,” he explains. By focusing on artists that retain the rights to their music, Merck envisions Hipgnosis as a vehicle of empowerment. The great work already exists, and Merck views his team as a mechanism to greater profit. “These are the houses that the artists built and paid for and therefore, if they choose to sell their house, that's on them. I'm empowering them when I write them a check and I'm empowering them when I go after improving their place in the economic equation. I don't buy from corporations, I buy directly from the songwriter.”

Music as a commodity
Perhaps the key feature in Mercuriadis’ pitch is in bringing his company to market so investors in the U.K. (and eventually the U.S.) can invest in Hipgnosis’ catalog as one would stocks or assets. “The income from these songs is very predictable and very reliable and those are the same reasons why you invest in things like gold and oil,” says Mercuriadis. “But, in fact, music is better than gold and oil because when something crazy happens in the marketplace, or Donald Trump does something stupid or Boris Johnson does something stupid, the price of gold and oil are affected. Great songs are always being consumed.”
Investing in new artists
One of the big risks Mercuriadis and his team are taking is in treating artists like the Chainsmokers and Ed Sheeran as this generation’s answer to classic artists from prior eras. Sure, many of the newer artists Hipgnosis has purchased songs from have a dominant presence in modern music, but will these songs appreciate in value, or, at the very least, stay the same? A lot of Hipgnosis’ early purchases focused on legacy catalogs, as there will always be demand for Wu-Tang songs in commercial and artistic settings, but can we forecast the power of “Closer” 10 years down the line? Is “Shape of You” truly canonical? Only time will tell, but skeptics have been quick to point this out.
Big Deal Music
One of the biggest acquisitions Hipgnosis recently made was the purchase of Big Deal Music, a publishing firm repping artists like My Morning Jacket, St. Vincent, Teddy Geiger, and more. This deal brought many younger artists into the company’s grips, and Big Music has been renamed the Hipgnosis Songs Group. Mercuriadis set his sights on Big Deal Music for a few reasons. “The core to our thesis is that streaming is blowing up the pie and that's a real reason for buying into these assets right now. People have access to music and to consume music in a way that's really meaningful. Big Deal was operating as a traditional publishing company, but I'm now changing the face of it. It will become a song management company as well as a song creation company. I want to replace the concept of publishing with song management. I think publishing is a broken model and, quite frankly, I should say, I want to obliterate it, I don't want it to exist anymore.”

Splitting the pie
One big problem with investing in newer artists is a trend where tracks are now often created using seven or eight songwriters. In mainstream rap, pop, and rock, credits can be levied to a number of different people, which makes the rights retained by a group like Hipgnosis less significant than if an individual writer was the sole contributor to his or her track. But, because of Mercuriadis’ artist-centric perspective, whatever makes the song stronger (and, it must be said, the most money) is worth it. “If success in 2020 means that you've got 20% of a song instead of having 50% of a song, that's okay, as long as it's an amazing song and it allows you to continue to go into the right rooms on a daily basis and work with the right artists and have success.”
The Kanye of it all
Of course, the idea of a hot new song management company with a catalog worth nearly one billion dollars is going to get caught up in Kanye West’s unending controversy. West is now working with Mercuriadis in some capacity, although the scope of their relationship is still unclear. Merck’s outsized personality, his company’s loud purchasing power, and its intense focus on disruption could skew the spotlight away from the artists they’re supposed to be empowering first and foremost. But Merck’s position is one, in his opinion, of leverage. He can get artists seats at tables they may not be able to get on their own. In the case of bigger artists, he’s lending them care and thoughtfulness that they may not have received at bloated publishing houses. In addition to the main motive of making money for everyone involved, Merck explains that the fund’s ulterior motive “is to change where the songwriter and artist and the producer sit in the economic equation and to make it a better world for them and to use our leverage for that.” It’s exactly what Kanye is fighting for.
What's next?
The path for Hipgnosis is clear. Keep buying, keep proving industry power, and keep investing. Though much of their staff is already located in the states, in the next 18 months or so Merck aims to focus his companies ambitions towards the American market. Mercuriadis began in the UK because the culture is bent towards music discovery, with BBC Radio 1 focusing entirely on new music. Here, discovery is done almost exclusively through streaming, in a very passive way. Mercuriadis wanted to capture the more fervorous, rapturous consumption of music across the pond before marketing his company in the United States. “Our agenda is to put the artist, the producer, and the songwriter at the forefront of everyone's cortex,” Merck says. “We want to use the leverage of our financial wherewithal and our great songs to change where the songwriter and the artist sit in the economic equation. That’s a very important part of what we're doing.”
 

Meet Merck Mercuriadis, the man who has spent $1bn on old hits
By Mark Savage
BBC music reporter

Published3 days ago
IMAGE COPYRIGHTJILL FURMANOVSKY
image captionMerck Mercuriadis managed artists like Elton John and Iron Maiden before launching his latest business
Did you know that the Church of England is a co-owner of Beyoncé's Single Ladies, Rihanna's Umbrella and Justin Timberlake's SexyBack?
It sounds bizarre - but the church is one of hundreds of investors in a company called Hipgnosis, which, for the past three years, has been hungrily snapping up the rights to thousands of hit songs.
So far, it has spent more than $1bn (£776m) on music by Mark Ronson, Chic, Barry Manilow and Blondie. Its latest acquisition is the song catalogue of LA Reid, meaning it has a share in tracks like Boyz II Men's End Of The Road, Whitney Houston's I'm Your Baby Tonight and Bobby Brown's Don't Be Cruel.
When those songs get played on the radio or placed in a film or TV show, Hipgnosis makes money. And so, by association, does the Church of England, along with other investors like Aviva, Investec and Axa.
'More valuable than gold'
According to Hipgnosis founder Merck Mercuriadis, the music he's bought is "more valuable than gold or oil".
"These great, proven songs are very predictable and reliable in their income streams," he explains.
"If you take a song like the Eurythmics' Sweet Dreams or Bon Jovi's Livin' On A Prayer, you're talking three to four decades of reliable income."
He says hit songs are a stable investment because their revenue isn't affected by fluctuations in the economy.
"If people are living their best lives, they're doing it to a soundtrack of songs," he explains. "But equally, if they're experiencing the sort of challenges we've experienced over the last six months, they're taking comfort and escaping in great songs.
"So music is always being consumed and it's always generating income."
IMAGE COPYRIGHTLAYTON THOMPSON
image captionHipgnosis was launched on the London Stock Exchange in 2018 by Mercuriadis and Hipgnosis adviser Nile Rodgers of Chic
In fact, with Spotify users increasing by a monthly average of 22% between March and July, streaming royalties have increased during the Covid-19 pandemic. As a result, Hipgnosis' share price has largely withstood the turmoil that has affected much of the business world.
Mercuriadis, from Quebec, Canada, got into the music industry after calling the Toronto office of Virgin Records every day for months until they gave him a job in the marketing department, where he worked with acts like UB40, The Human League and XTC.
In 1986, he joined the Sanctuary Group, ultimately becoming its CEO, where he managed the careers of Elton John, Iron Maiden, Guns N' Roses, Destiny's Child and Beyoncé, as well as working on the relaunch of Morrissey's career in 2004.
Kanye West recently called him one "of the most powerful and knowledgeable people in music".
'Fired for telling the truth'
"I've been very lucky to work with everyone I've ever wanted to work with," says Mercuriadis.
He says the key to managing any successful artist is to "fight hard for them" and "tell the truth", even when it's uncomfortable.
"The thing that most people don't realise is that, if you have a career that's the length of Elton's, you're going to be the coolest artist in the world seven times over. Equally, you're going to be the most uncool artist seven times over.
"Real life is saying, 'This is where we currently are, this is where we want to be, and this is what we have to do to get there. So let's roll our sleeves up and get our hands dirty and get stuck in.'"
He admits he's been "fired for telling the truth" in the past - although he won't name names.
"It happens all the time," is all he will say. "The truth is something few people want to tell. It's arguable that even fewer want to hear it."
IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES
image captionHipgnosis has acquired the rights to hits by Dave Stewart, Blondie and Barry Manilow, among others
The idea for Hipgnosis came to Mercuriadis in 2009, around the time Spotify launched in the UK.
"I could see that streaming was going to change the landscape, and was going to make the music industry very successful all over again," he says.
He points out that the industry's traditional benchmark for success is the platinum record - which, in the US, represents a million sales. It sounds impressive, he says, until you realise that a hit film like Toy Story 4 sold 43 million tickets.
"So that immediately tells you that, while the vast majority of the population may enjoy music, very few of them put their hand in their pocket and pull out a tenner and pay for it."
Streaming changed that, he says, because previously passive consumers were willing to pay a monthly subscription. "Instead of the focus being that one in 350 people would actually pay for music, the focus is on all of them."
An estimated 88 million people subscribe to streaming services in the US, more than a quarter of the population.
Unlike most music companies, Hipgnosis isn't focused on finding the "next big thing". A third of the songs it owns are more than 10 years old, and 59% are between three and 10 years old. Fewer than 10% are newer releases.
"The one thing that they all have in common is that they are culturally important," says Mercuriadis.
'Each song is a mini brand'
The idea of investing in an artist's future earnings isn't new. In 1997, David Bowie sold asset-backed securities, dubbed "Bowie bonds", which awarded investors a share in the royalties of songs like Life On Mars and Heroes.
The down side was that it was essentially a loan. If Bowie didn't make as much money as predicted, he'd have had to surrender the rights to his songs.
Mercuriadis says his deals are "more sophisticated", with artists paid 15 years of royalties up front. Taking tax relief into account, many walk away with "about 25 years worth of money in one fell swoop", he says. In return, Hipgnosis owns the songs in perpetuity.
For artists, the attraction isn't just the money, but that Hipgnosis acts as a "song management company" rather than simply exploiting a hit to underwrite new music (which is how most labels and publishers work).
"It's about looking at each song as a mini brand in itself," said the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart after selling his catalogue to the company last year.
"People around the world singing 'Sweet dreams are made of this' might not know who I am, or the Eurythmics, but they'll sing the next line. [Merck's] whole approach is take these classic songs and keep them alive and build little worlds around them.
"Well, that is fine by me because... when I go out and play those songs, I want people to know them. He's very proactive."
IMAGE COPYRIGHTCAITLIN MOGRIDGE
image captionMercuriadis and Rodgers signed their deal with The Eurythmics' Dave Stewart last year
For a company that has based its strategy on future earnings, Mercuriadis must be aware of the criticism of royalty rates paid to artists by streaming services. Does he support the current #BrokenRecord and #FixStreaming campaigns, which argue for a more equitable rate of return?
"Yes, streaming services need to pay songwriters more money," he says. But he adds: "Where I think the #BrokenRecord campaign is imperfect is that their focus is on the streaming services [when] the real villains are the major record companies that are taking the lion's share of the money.
"The way the economic model works is that Apple, Amazon and Spotify keep 30% of the money for themselves and they pay 70% to the rights holders. As it currently stands, 58.5p out of that remaining 70p is going to the record company. The artist is getting, at best, one sixth of that [meaning] 11.5p is going to the song.
"We think it's time that the record companies stepped up and recognised that there's a real imbalance between what's being paid for recorded music versus what's being paid for the song."
In fact, the campaign has been equally critical of both streaming providers and record labels - but Mercuriadis says people should focus first on increasing the global subscriber base of streaming services from 450 million to two billion by the end of the decade.
"Because if that becomes reality then the earnings of the songwriters will be very significant".
By then, he hopes Hipgnosis will have a catalogue of around 60,000 songs, at which point they'll get out of the acquisition business and focus on placing their hits in video games or TV shows, getting new artists to cover them, and making sure they're featured on prominent playlists.
"These great songs are the energy that makes the world go round," he says.
Before then, though, is there a song catalogue he'd love to get his hands on?
"Everybody wants The Beatles," he smiles. "It's the greatest set of songs ever written.
"I don't think I'd want to live if The Beatles weren't part of this world."
 

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Hipgnosis enters US market with acquisition of Big Deal Music

UK company expands song rights catalogue and adds publishing to its portfolio St Vincent performing at last year’s Grammy Awards. The rights to some of her songs are among those now owned by Hipgnosis as part of the deal © Kevin Mazur/Getty Share on Twitter (opens new window) Share on Facebook (opens new window) Share on LinkedIn (opens new window) Save Nic Fildes SEPTEMBER 10 2020 3 Print this page Hipgnosis Songs Fund has landed its largest ever acquisition, buying US-based Big Deal Music to give it a significant foothold in the sector’s largest market.

The acquisitive British music company, which has raised almost £1bn to buy song rights, has added 4,400 to its catalogue as part of the takeover, including hits by One Direction, Shawn Mendes, My Morning Jacket and St Vincent, who won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Song last year. Hipgnosis, which is advised by Chic’s Nile Rodgers, has built a portfolio of 13,000 songs during an acquisition spree since it floated in the UK in 2018. It has targeted a mix of songwriters, particularly hip-hop artists and older stars including Blondie and Barry Manilow. It did not disclose the sum paid for Big Deal but said the acquisition would be funded through a mix of existing cash reserves and shares.

Hipgnosis raised almost £240m in July and will issue new ordinary shares worth roughly £27m to Big Deal’s owners. Big Deal was founded 12 years ago by Kenny McPherson, a Scottish industry veteran who cut his teeth working as comedian Billy Connolly’s tour manager in the 1970s before joining UK music publisher Chrysalis. The company has quickly grown into one of the 10 largest publishing businesses in the US by number of hits. Mr McPherson will now team up with Merck Mercuriadis, founder of Hipgnosis and former manager of Elton John, who told the Financial Times in January that a move to the US was the next part of the company’s strategy.

Recommended Music Blondie in rapture after selling song rights to Hipgnosis fund The Big Deal acquisition adds offices in New York, Los Angeles and Nashville and also broadens Hipgnosis’s business to include more traditional publishing activities such as advancing money to songwriters on its books. “Big Deal Music has become one of the most important boutique song companies in the world over the last eight years,” said Mr Mercuriadis.

They identify exceptional songwriters at a very early stage, make a modest capital investment and then work hard to put them in rooms with the best-established songwriters and artists in the world resulting in placements, hits and exceptional returns.” He added that the company had built a “very attractive catalogue that complements our existing acquisitions perfectly”. Hipgnosis shares, which traded under the ticker SONG, were flat at 122.25p having risen almost 40 per cent since March.
 
Black folks love selling legacy art :smh:. Surprised RZA wouldn't give the others members a chance to hold those rights for their families. I mean that was one of their main issues for not recording more was EZA has so much of the producer and writers credits. Fucking sad.

Shit will look like Blues and Jazz in 50 years, everything owned by white children and their children. Fuck :angry:
 
Shakira is the latest star to sell the rights to her songs

Shakira has become the latest artist to sell the rights to her music for a multi-million dollar sum.

All 145 of her songs, including Hips Don't Lie, Whenever, Wherever and She Wolf, are included in the deal.
The songs have made her the best-selling female Latin artist of all time, with 80 million records sold worldwide.
The deal was struck with the Hipgnosis Song Fund, which also recently acquired Blondie and Neil Young's music.

Hipgnosis company did not disclose financial details of the sale, but it typically pays the equivalent of 15 years' royalties up front.
With tax relief, many walk away with "about 25 years worth of money in one fell swoop", the company's founder, Merck Mercuriadis, told the BBC last year.

That provides the artists with immediate financial security, while Hipgnosis - which owns the songs in perpetuity - hopes to profit by building new revenue streams for the music via film and TV licensing, merchandise, cover versions and performance royalties.

Why Shakira?

Hipgnosis has been on a billion-dollar spending spree over the last few years, snapping up the rights to music by artists like Nile Rodgers, Blondie, Barry Manilow, Chrissie Hynde and Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey Buckingham.

Shakira's hits came more recently than those "legacy" artists, but she is one of the most successful singer-songwriters of the last 25 years.

Since releasing her first album in 1991, at the age of 13, she has sold more than 80 million records, won three Grammy Awards and 12 Latin Grammy Awards.\

Her first English-language album, Laundry Service, was bought by more than 13 million fans in 2001, while her hit singles include Whenever, Wherever, Underneath Your Clothes, Hips Don't Lie and the 2010 Fifa World Cup song Waka Waka (This Time For Africa), which topped the charts in 15 countries.

The star's most recent album, El Dorado, was certified diamond in the US. She is one of only three female artists to have two videos exceeding two billion views on YouTube. And her latest single, Girl Like Me, has spawned a viral dance craze on Tik Tok.

Last year, she starred in the Super Bowl half-time show alongside Jennifer Lopez, giving her song catalogue a further boost - and increasing its value to investors.

"She is a superb creator who has led the charge from what was massive physical success to now having bigger success in streaming than most of her contemporaries," said Mercuriadis in a statement.

"This is the result of her being a determined force of nature and having written songs the world is incredibly passionate about."

Why are all these artists selling their music?

Financial security is the obvious reason. Rather than gambling that their songs will continue earn royalties, for the next 25 years, singers like Shakira get a lump sum up-front.

Hipgnosis's pitch to musicians is that they are not a traditional publisher, exploiting the rights of a composition, but a "song management company" that will ensure an artist's legacy by careful stewardship of their music.

After buying a 50% take in Neil Young's catalogue, for example, Mercuriadis promised that the singer's classic track Heart of Gold would never be found on a burger commercial.

Hipgnosis is not the only company in the game. Earlier this week, investment company KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) bought the rights to 500 songs written by Ryan Tedder - including tracks like Ed Sheeran's Happier, Camila Cabello's Into It and the Jonas Brothers' Sucker.

Bob Dylan recently handed his 600-song back catalogue to Universal Music, in a deal that was reported to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
And the US-based Primary Wave has been buying up the rights to music by Stevie Nicks, Leon Russell, Leo Sayer and soft-rock duo Air Supply.

For Shakira, another factor in selling up could be the €14.5m (£13m) tax bill she recently faced from Spanish government.

I thought artists wanted to own their songs?

Certainly, a lot of musicians have gone to war over the rights to their music.

Paul McCartney famously fell out with Michael Jackson after he bought the rights to the Beatles songs in the 1980s. Prince spent most of the 1990s battling record label Warner Bros over the ownership of his music - even writing the word "slave" on his face in protest.

And right now, Taylor Swift is busily re-recording all of her first six albums, after the master tapes (i.e. the original recordings) were sold to a private investment company against her will. :eek2:

Someone like Swift is unlikely to sell her publishing rights (which cover the music and lyrics) but other artists will take a different view.

Sophisticated buyers work hand-in-hand with musicians, defining how their songs and recordings can (and cannot) be used. And some artists, like Neil Young, have only sold a portion of their rights - meaning they retain a degree of control.

Another potential benefit of selling is that, when an artist dies, their music won't be tied up in ugly and lengthy family battles over who will manage their legacy.

So what does Shakira have to say about all of this?

In a statement, the Colombian said Hipgnosis would be a "great home" for her music, and waxed lyrical about her love of songwriting.

"Being a songwriter is an accomplishment that I consider equal to and perhaps even greater than being a singer and an artist, " she said.

"At eight years old - long before I sang - I wrote to make sense of the world. Each song is a reflection of the person I was at the time that I wrote it, but once a song is out in the world, it belongs not only to me but to those who appreciate it as well.

"I'm humbled that songwriting has given me the privilege of communicating with others, of being a part of something bigger than myself."

So now you know.

 
Shakira is the latest star to sell the rights to her songs

Shakira has become the latest artist to sell the rights to her music for a multi-million dollar sum.

All 145 of her songs, including Hips Don't Lie, Whenever, Wherever and She Wolf, are included in the deal.
The songs have made her the best-selling female Latin artist of all time, with 80 million records sold worldwide.
The deal was struck with the Hipgnosis Song Fund, which also recently acquired Blondie and Neil Young's music.

Hipgnosis company did not disclose financial details of the sale, but it typically pays the equivalent of 15 years' royalties up front.
With tax relief, many walk away with "about 25 years worth of money in one fell swoop", the company's founder, Merck Mercuriadis, told the BBC last year.

That provides the artists with immediate financial security, while Hipgnosis - which owns the songs in perpetuity - hopes to profit by building new revenue streams for the music via film and TV licensing, merchandise, cover versions and performance royalties.

Why Shakira?

Hipgnosis has been on a billion-dollar spending spree over the last few years, snapping up the rights to music by artists like Nile Rodgers, Blondie, Barry Manilow, Chrissie Hynde and Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey Buckingham.

Shakira's hits came more recently than those "legacy" artists, but she is one of the most successful singer-songwriters of the last 25 years.

Since releasing her first album in 1991, at the age of 13, she has sold more than 80 million records, won three Grammy Awards and 12 Latin Grammy Awards.\

Her first English-language album, Laundry Service, was bought by more than 13 million fans in 2001, while her hit singles include Whenever, Wherever, Underneath Your Clothes, Hips Don't Lie and the 2010 Fifa World Cup song Waka Waka (This Time For Africa), which topped the charts in 15 countries.

The star's most recent album, El Dorado, was certified diamond in the US. She is one of only three female artists to have two videos exceeding two billion views on YouTube. And her latest single, Girl Like Me, has spawned a viral dance craze on Tik Tok.

Last year, she starred in the Super Bowl half-time show alongside Jennifer Lopez, giving her song catalogue a further boost - and increasing its value to investors.

"She is a superb creator who has led the charge from what was massive physical success to now having bigger success in streaming than most of her contemporaries," said Mercuriadis in a statement.

"This is the result of her being a determined force of nature and having written songs the world is incredibly passionate about."

Why are all these artists selling their music?

Financial security is the obvious reason. Rather than gambling that their songs will continue earn royalties, for the next 25 years, singers like Shakira get a lump sum up-front.

Hipgnosis's pitch to musicians is that they are not a traditional publisher, exploiting the rights of a composition, but a "song management company" that will ensure an artist's legacy by careful stewardship of their music.

After buying a 50% take in Neil Young's catalogue, for example, Mercuriadis promised that the singer's classic track Heart of Gold would never be found on a burger commercial.

Hipgnosis is not the only company in the game. Earlier this week, investment company KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) bought the rights to 500 songs written by Ryan Tedder - including tracks like Ed Sheeran's Happier, Camila Cabello's Into It and the Jonas Brothers' Sucker.

Bob Dylan recently handed his 600-song back catalogue to Universal Music, in a deal that was reported to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
And the US-based Primary Wave has been buying up the rights to music by Stevie Nicks, Leon Russell, Leo Sayer and soft-rock duo Air Supply.

For Shakira, another factor in selling up could be the €14.5m (£13m) tax bill she recently faced from Spanish government.

I thought artists wanted to own their songs?

Certainly, a lot of musicians have gone to war over the rights to their music.

Paul McCartney famously fell out with Michael Jackson after he bought the rights to the Beatles songs in the 1980s. Prince spent most of the 1990s battling record label Warner Bros over the ownership of his music - even writing the word "slave" on his face in protest.

And right now, Taylor Swift is busily re-recording all of her first six albums, after the master tapes (i.e. the original recordings) were sold to a private investment company against her will. :eek2:

Someone like Swift is unlikely to sell her publishing rights (which cover the music and lyrics) but other artists will take a different view.

Sophisticated buyers work hand-in-hand with musicians, defining how their songs and recordings can (and cannot) be used. And some artists, like Neil Young, have only sold a portion of their rights - meaning they retain a degree of control.

Another potential benefit of selling is that, when an artist dies, their music won't be tied up in ugly and lengthy family battles over who will manage their legacy.

So what does Shakira have to say about all of this?

In a statement, the Colombian said Hipgnosis would be a "great home" for her music, and waxed lyrical about her love of songwriting.

"Being a songwriter is an accomplishment that I consider equal to and perhaps even greater than being a singer and an artist, " she said.

"At eight years old - long before I sang - I wrote to make sense of the world. Each song is a reflection of the person I was at the time that I wrote it, but once a song is out in the world, it belongs not only to me but to those who appreciate it as well.

"I'm humbled that songwriting has given me the privilege of communicating with others, of being a part of something bigger than myself."

So now you know.


Wow....
 
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