Music Biz: With $70M from Alphabet, Steve Stoute creates United Masters to replace record labels

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https://techcrunch.com/2017/11/15/united-masters/

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Record labels are obsolete. They haven’t kept up as music evolved from selling CDs to streaming songs to promoting concert tickets and merchandise. Labels were meant to help artists generate albums, fame, and money. But now anyone can record themselves and no one “buys” music. So today that requires being a technology company, combining analytics with hyper-targeted advertising. And the old labels don’t have the engineering talent for it.

That’s why last year, the former president of Interscope Records Steve Stoute secretly raised $70 million from Google parent company Alphabet, prestigious venture firm Andreessen Horowitz, and entertainment giant 20th Century Fox.

Today, his startup United Masters emerges from stealth.

United Masters is ready to give musicians an alternative to exploitative record label deals. Artists pay United Masters a competitive rate to distribute their music across the internet from Spotify to YouTube to SoundCloud, and they split the royalties while the artist retains the rights to the master recordings. Then United Masters sucks back in all the analytics, identifies the listeners, builds artists a CRM tool, and helps them retarget their top fans with pinpointed ads for tickets and merch.

Stoute explains that the plan is to “Look at music like gaming. You monetize the game to all the people who are most engaged. I wanted to bring that theory and thinking to music.” It’s off those whales, those super fans, where musicians make a lot of their money. And finally someone built a way to deliver ads for what artists do sell to people who’ve listened to their album 50 times for almost nothing.

Stoute had already been working on an ad agency for culture makers called Translation since 2004, and the company will join United Masters as part of Translation Enterprises. Beyond musicians, United Masters will also work with brands looking to advertise to specific segments of listeners. For example, it could assist alcohol magnate Diageo to market its Puff Daddy-affiliated vodka Cîroc to the rapper’s fans.

The startup world’s biggest rap fan Ben Horowitz is so smitten with the idea that he’s joining the board of United Masters. “Steve thought: What if there were a platform that instantly enabled musical artists to market themselves globally as effectively as the top technology companies market to their customers?” Horowitz wrote in a now-published blog postshared with TechCrunch. “Such a platform would free musicians from dependencies on the old model while increasing their income tenfold. It would create unprecedented intimacy between artists and fans, while making artists truly independent.”

It was Larry Page himself that pushed Alphabet to lead the startup’s $70 million Series A. “People don’t know Larry was actually a drummer. He has a deep sensitivity for the artist” says Stoute. Page was stunned that musicians couldn’t keep track of the fans that bring in the most cash and retarget them. So Page worked with Google’s Corp Dev leader David Drummond, a former radio DJ, to invest all the cash United Masters needed.

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The Google family is quite gung-ho about upending the recording industry. The first investment of GV (Google Ventures) was Kobalt, a music distribution and rights service. It’s raised over $200 million to track to publish artists’ work and track down royalties, but Kobalt now also buys music copyrights and stops short of helping performers market their tours and t-shirts.


Musicians trust him unlike some technologists. Born in Queens, NY, he used to manage local heroes Nas and Mary J. Blige, turning them into icons. Talking to him, you get the distinct sense that he’s fed up with seeing other musicians get screwed over. He refers to United Masters more like a movement than a mere software company.

Music Tech Is Inevitable, Not The Enemy
The first iteration of United Masters is now live allowing artists to connect their YouTube or SoundCloud accounts to the site and in return receive “personalized guidance on how you can grow your career”. That could include insights into fan demographics or where to route tours.

United Masters is now actively recruiting both tech talent in product, design, and engineering; and its first wave of independent musicians. The team of around 40 features ex-Facebook and Dropboxers. Meanwhile, it’s already working with around 1,000 acts, focusing first on emerging artists who want to be digital natives in how they run their business. “Being able to operationalize independence was the goal of United Masters.There needs to be 250,000 Chance The Rappers” Stoute says, pointing to the fiercely indie hip-hop upstart who won a Grammy as a role model.

Eventually, it could sign established artists who want to ditch their label deals, bet on their long-term potential, and retain control of their original recordings. Instead of a cash advance, a leash, and a sliver of the revenue, United Masters acts as a partner.

Now labels often want a cut of all of the artists’ revenue streams. “Label started doing 360 deals because they margins were drying up [as CD sales declined], but they weren’t providing a 360 service” Stoute chides. “I’m not making the records labels the ‘bad guy'” he qualifies, but declares “The models have to change.” Artists often complain that streaming doesn’t pay enough, but companies like Spotify pay out almost 70 percent of their revenue. It’s the labels withholding more than they deserve.

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There are already services like TuneCore for pushing music to the streaming services, and each of them is trying to woo musicians by providing more analytics. Spotify just launched a whole insights app for artists. There are also plenty of merchandise platforms and ticket partners to choose from. But United Masters wants to be the missing data layer for the music business. That could allow it to find a huge fan of an artist on Pandora earning them just fractions of a cent per stream, retarget them with ads on Facebook, and get them to buy a signed poster or VIP ticket package.

Educating artists that there’s another path could be United Masters‘ biggest challenge. Many musicians still think of streaming as the enemy, cannibalizing their album sales, rather than as the inevitable progression of music distribution that can serve as marketing for their band as a brand. But once artists see that they’re not much different from Nike and their songs are like commercials, they realize they need help getting listeners to convert, and turn their passion into a purchase.

There’s room for both the old school labels and startups like Kobalt and United Masters. But artists are beginning to see themselves more as founders building a team of marketing and product specialists, rather than able to get all the diverse servies they need from one company or label. That could make United Masters’ partner model increasingly attractive compared to giving control to an outdated, centralized owner.

“It’s very important that an artist’s jobs is to be a great artist” Stoute concludes. “The infrastructure around them should be helping them get more money at efficient rates, not owning their masters and taking from them.”
 
https://www.wsj.com/articles/silico...sic-venture-helmed-by-steve-stoute-1510747381

Silicon Valley Firms Back New Music Venture Helmed by Steve Stoute
New venture that marries marketing and music lures financing from Alphabet, Andreessen Horowitz and 21st Century Fox


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Rap mogul Jay-Z, left, and music-industry veteran and Translation Chief Executive Steve Stoute at an event in Houston in 2013. PHOTO:JOHNNY NUNEZ/WIREIMAGE/GETTY IMAGES
By
Alexandra Bruell
Nov. 15, 2017 7:03 a.m. ET
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When Steve Stoute was working at Interscope Records in the late 1990s, he recalls tossing around an idea with record producer and Interscope co-founder Jimmy Iovine to create an advertising business that would insert brand logos into CD jewel cases, creating an “audio experience brought to you by Apple or Nike . ”

“The idea didn’t go anywhere, but I’ve been thinking about it since then,” said Mr. Stoute, who left the record label in 2001 and founded the ad agency Translation in 2004, where he is chief executive.

Almost two decades later, he is bringing advertising and music together, but without the jewel cases. Mr. Stoute is unveiling a music venture called UnitedMasters with $70 million in funding from investors including Google parent Alphabet Inc., GOOGL -0.59%Andreessen Horowitz and 21st Century Fox . FOX -0.66%

21st Century Fox and Wall Street Journal parent company News Corp share common ownership.

The San Francisco-based venture, which has been building a 40-person team, will help up-and-coming artists get their music on streaming platforms like Spotify and Pandora and use online tools to market the musicians and help them reach fans. The group, and the data it gleans, will also help brands target certain types of music fans.

“We want to build a business that helps musicians, which is my passion, and also helps brands find a much more specific way of investing their money in the category of music,” Mr. Stoute said.

UnitedMasters and his ad agency Translation will be part of a new holding group called Translation Enterprises.

Musicians will pay UnitedMasters what Mr. Stoute describes as “the lowest price for distribution” to get their songs to stream on music sites, and the company in turn pays the streaming companies. UnitedMasters will, in some cases, get a small percentage of the money the artists make when theirs songs are streamed. In other custom deals with musicians, UnitedMasters may get a percentage of merchandise or ticket sales.

In return, the artist will be able to use UnitedMasters’ system to glean insights into who their fans are.


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Ben Horowitz is a co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, which is an investor in UnitedMasters. PHOTO: DAVID PAUL MORRIS/BLOOMBERG NEWS
For example, individual artists can see who is listening to their songs, and then use the company’s tools to automatically retarget the listeners through online ads promoting new songs, merchandise or tour dates.

Ben Horowitz, a co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, which is an investor in UnitedMasters, said the new firm helps answer the question of “how do you convert cultural capital into financial capital.”

“This idea is particularly relevant in that we’ve gotten to a time when businesses really know their customer,” Mr. Horowitz said. “It’s very powerful information that drives a tremendous amount of revenue, and musical artists have no idea who their customers are.”

Artists can create accounts with UnitedMasters, but the team and its technology are also working to scour platforms like music-streaming site SoundCloud and YouTube to discover promising new talent. The group is working with 1,000 musicians, according to Mr. Stoute, who added that the artists will still own the rights to their music.

Mr. Stoute and Mr. Horowitz said the firm is distinct from competitors because of its relationships with both artists and brands, as well as its ability to match music data with other customer data.

A promotional video for UnitedMasters touts the firm’s mission to be a new kind of music company.
UnitedMasters will also help brand clients target certain types of music fans, Mr. Stoute said. For example, an automotive company may be trying to get its message in front of young people that are in the market for a certain type of car. UnitedMasters could then match separate data sets to see which fans of a certain musician are in the market for a car, and then serve them online ads that feature a song by that particular artist.

“Brands are spending hundreds of millions of dollars trying to get to young people by using music as the vehicle,” he said. “Being able to use music data and making it actionable so they can target and speak to these fans, that’s super important.”


The firm is piloting the UnitedMasters music offering with two brands, one of which is already a Translation client, according to Mr. Stoute.

Ad shops have come under pressure in recent years to diversify their offerings and add new services amid heightened competition from consulting and digital-marketing firms. They are also grappling with changes from brands that are cutting back on spending and re-evaluating their marketing strategies and agency relationships.

Mr. Stoute got serious about revisiting his CD ad idea a few years ago, when he started to see the shift from “brick and mortar” music sales to streaming as an opportunity for artists to find and retarget fans, he said.

The idea really started to materialize at an exclusive “Google Camp” event for the tech giant’s partners in Italy a few years ago, Mr. Horowitz said. He and Mr. Stoute were there together, and they started to talk about what kind of music company Google might want to partner with.

“That was the catalyst for evolving Steve’s thinking into, this is really the right place to go,” said Mr. Horowitz.

Corrections & Amplifications
Steve Stoute is chief executive of ad agency Translation. An earlier version of a caption accompanying a photo with this article incorrectly gave his company name as Transition. (Nov. 15)
 
http://mashable.com/2017/11/15/united-masters-launch-steve-stoute-record-label/#egZ9xyQjlsqz

United Masters wants to create many more Chance the Rappers
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No label? No problem.
IMAGE: GETTY IMAGES FOR FIREFLY
BY KERRY FLYNN2 HOURS AGO

Imagine you're in the market for a new pair of shoes, and you hear your favorite artist playing in the background of an online ad.

Coincidence? Maybe not in the future. Launched out of stealth mode Wednesday by record label veteran Steve Stoute, United Masters is tying together artists and brands in the hope of driving more attention and sales for both groups.

SEE ALSO: Pandora tried to become more like Spotify and now it's bleeding users


And cutting out labels in the process.

“Brands are spending hundreds of millions of dollars trying to get to young people by using music as the vehicle,” Stoute told the Wall Street Journal. “Being able to use music data and making it actionable so they can target and speak to these fans, that’s super important.”

The concept of empowering artists with data isn't anything new. In 2014, a startup called 300 partnered with Twitter to sort through its music data and share it with artists, record labels, and consumer brands. Spotify launched a new app for artists last month that lets them see their listening data in real-time.

United Masters, however, is vying to be artists' best partner. The team will help get artists' songs on music streaming sites like Spotify and Youtube. The artists will then have access to United Masters' platform to see who their listeners are and potentially target them with online ads. So far, the company works with about 1,000 artists.

Of course, it's not all in good faith. Artists must pay a fee described to The Wall Street Journalas the "lowest price for distribution" and also split the royalties. The artists still retains the rights to the master recordings, but they must willingly hand over their data.

In this way, United Masters isn't acting directly as a record label. But it could later "sign established artists who want to ditch their label deals," TechCrunch wrote.

That royalty split was seen viewed by some as a red flag.

"I would never ever advise any artist to split royalties," said Adam Marx, a music entrepreneur who ran music discovery service Glipple. United Masters is "going to try and play both ends against the middle."

Along with opening up to the public, United Masters announced a $70 million in venture capital funding. It's not just a hefty check. The venture has the support of two of the most notable firms in Silicon Valley: Google's parent Alphabet and venture firm Andreessen Horowitz. 21st Century Fox also participated.

United Masters' venture capital backers are confident in the mission. In fact, it was Google cofounder and Alphabet CEO Larry Page who advocated for his company to lead the Series A. He refers to United Masters as a "a movement than a mere software company," according to TechCrunch.

The venture is, at least, a sign that the traditional models of the music industry continue to shift. Chance the Rapper has continuously proven that artists don't necessarily need labels.

"It tells you that there is a massive market validation for the notion that there's money to be made from independent artists, not just streaming listeners," Marx said.
 
Ryan Leslie bypassed the labels by doing a membership program tied to music and merch. He was onto this direction ahead of his time.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan_Leslie#NextSelection_Lifestyle_Group





While working as a producer, Leslie went on to create NextSelection Lifestyle Group, his music-media company he founded with online marketing partner Rasheed Richmond.[15][16] Ryan signed his first artist, Cassie in 2005. Under Ryan's guidance, Cassie went on to become one of the fastest rising R&B acts that year. Her breakout smash "Me & U" (written and produced by Leslie) spent 20 weeks on the Top 40 and went on to reach number three on the Billboard Hot 100, selling over a million digital units. "Me & U" also went on to become one of the biggest records in the history of Atlantic Records.[17]

Ryan posts an interactive daily video blog, where he gives viewers a taste of what daily life is like in the music business. "Blogging is something that allows us to document life," Leslie said. "When you look at a lot of successful films, books, a lot of them relate to the experiences of others," and the video blog is a way for him to connect with the masses. "There have been other video blogs, but this one's a first of its kind from a music standpoint," he said [18] "It's a huge commitment," he said of the video blog. "It takes six, seven hours a day to produce a video blog." [18] In anticipation for the release of Les Is More, Leslie releases a new music video from his album for every video that reaches one million hits on his website ryanleslie.com.

Recently, Ryan signed Krys Ivory as his newest act under NextSelection.[19] He also signed YouTube star Mia Rose.
 
Good all them old exploitive cacs in the industry and their faggot coon minions..

Need to fallback.. this is an awesome idea..

Love the fact artist get to own their music...
 
Scanned the article & seems like a good idea but where it fails is they want the artist to pay them for some shit that they do themselves.

Will be watching this closely.
 
Dont know great idea but Stoute always seems to start something then you never hear of it again
 
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