CMU Digest is a weekly round-up of the most interesting music business news stories from the last seven days.Â
This week: SXSW announced it was ditching its âproblematicâ sponsors, but what about its far more problematic ties to Saudi Arabian money? The record industryâs first big legal battle with music AI begins as the major record companies sue Suno and Udio. PRS has been sued by a group of its own songwriter members who say it puts in place âunreasonable and unnecessary hurdlesâ when they try to directly license live performances of their songs. More Hipgnosis dramas amid speculation that hedge funds could be about to trip up Blackstoneâs deal to acquire Hipgnosis Songs Fund. And lots more music AI news involving YouTube, Anthropic, AI:OK, Stability and Apple.Â
ICMYI: EU confirms that Appleâs amended app rules still donât comply with Digital Markets Act; judge says Kneecap can take legal action against UK government; Live Nation boss Michael Rapino sued by shareholder over DoJ action; KKR acquires Superstruct; Believe shareholders resoundingly support founderâs âamicable buy-backâ
Also this week: MIA says $100 tin foil hat is a ânecessityâ but will it make Diplo happy?
SXSW ditched some âproblematicâ sponsors – but will it cut its ties to its far more problematic Saudi Arabian money?
Having the US military as a sponsor – and allowing weapons companies to be involved in its conference – caused controversy at this yearâs edition of SXSWâs Austin showcase festival. After a boycott by artists, and although it previously defended its partners, this week SXSW said it had ârevisedâ its sponsorship model and âas a result, the US Army, and companies who engage in weapons manufacturing, will not be sponsors of SXSW 2025â.
The move was widely welcomed, although, as a CMU report pointed out, SXSW still has problematic backers. The festivalâs majority owner, Penske Media Corporation, has received hundreds of millions of dollars from the Saudi Research and Media Group, a media company closely associated with the Saudi royal family and crown prince Mohammad bin Salman or âMBSâ.Â
MBS is best known for – according to US intelligence – ordering the murder and dismemberment of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent critic of the Saudi regime. Saudi Arabia consistently comes close to the bottom of the various indices that track human rights and freedom around the world.Â
Meanwhile, SXSWâs new London edition is being pulled together by Ali Munir, a director of Penske, and formerly Terra Firmaâs âman in the Middle Eastâ. For some reason Munir has licensed the SXSW brand via an offshore company in Jersey, a notoriously opaque jurisdiction.
Munir has previously waxed lyrical about the âbright prospects for the private equity industry in Saudi Arabiaâ, and is the son-in-law of the owner of one of Saudi Arabiaâs most successful investment banks. SXSW Londonâs PR firm, Freud Communications – which has previously worked for the Saudi government – claims that there isnât any Saudi money in SXSW London, but canât provide any proof to back that up.
The major record companies are suing AI music platforms Suno and Udio
In a lawsuit coordinated by the RIAA, the labels said both AI businesses have trained their generative AI models with existing music without getting permission, and are therefore liable for copyright infringement. âAI companies, like all other enterprises, must abide by the laws that protect human creativity and ingenuityâ, the lawsuit stated.Â
Although both Suno and Udio have been vague about what music they have used to train their models, the lawsuit said it was clear they have used large quantities of commercially released tracks. Users can use Suno and Udio to generate âsound-a-likes of numerous sound recordingsâ, and Suno even âleft producer tags on their outputsâ. Anticipating that both AI companies will claim training AI models with existing music is âfair useâ under US law – meaning permission is not required – the labels insisted that defence does not apply.Â
Responding, Suno CEO Mikey Shulman accused the labels of reverting to their âold lawyer-led playbookâ, referencing the lawsuits filed by the record industry in the early days of file-sharing. Udio published a blog post insisting their technology listens to rather than copies existing music. Both also argued that their aim is to enable more music-making. The RIAA was scathing about both responses, insisting that âsupporting real creativity means getting permission before using someoneâs workâ.
A group of songwriters are suing PRS over its approach to the direct licensing of live music
When songs are performed live, usually the promoter of the show gets a licence covering the performing rights in those songs from a collecting society, so PRS in the UK. However, some songwriters pull out of the collective licensing system in some scenarios, usually around their own shows, so that the promoter has to do a deal directly with the writer.Â
A group of writers – including King Crimson founder Robert Fripp and two members of the Jesus & Mary Chain – say that when they go that route, PRS puts in place âunreasonable and unnecessary hurdlesâ which adds to the complexity of employing direct licensing. That, their lawsuit argues, is to discourage writers from directly licensing live performances.
The lawsuit also criticises PRSâs Major Live Concert Service, which is available to PRS member artists who play shows with a capacity over 5000. The scheme makes the licensing of shows through the collective licensing system more efficient. But the lawsuit says PRS, as a collecting society, should not be giving the most successful artists preferential treatment.Â
Hedge funds could be about to trip up Blackstoneâs deal to acquire Hipgnosis Songs Fund
Recent transactions involving a number of hedge funds could be about to add another dramatic twist to the investment firmâs plan to acquire Hipgnosis Songs Fund, or SONG. Having fought off rival bidder Concord, it looked like Blackstoneâs deal to acquire SONG was a done deal. It seemed like everything was on course for its acquisition to be completed as a âscheme of arrangementâ, making it easier to take 100% control of SONG – especially after Blackstone found a few million dollars spare to help sweeten the offer.
However, despite that sweetener a number of hedge funds have been buying up SONG shares in recent weeks, often at prices within a hairâs breadth of the $1.31 offer price. As a result, nearly 35% of SONG shares ended up in the control of just four hedge fund investors, leading to speculation that those funds were hoping to squeeze more money out of Blackstone. In response, Blackstoneâs Lyra BidCo – the company that will acquire SONG – was forced to issue a statement making it clear that there would be no more money on the table, and its $1.31 offer was âfinal, and will not be increasedâ. Despite that, some hedge funds have still continued to buy up shares – with TIG snapping up another 2 million, and Glazer buying 3 million more – increasing speculation that the deal could falter.
This should all become clearer on 8 Jul when crucial meetings to determine the success of Blackstoneâs offer will take place – but that still leaves a full week of trading days wide open, and itâs far from clear what the hedge fundsâ end game might be. With various options on the table, itâs beginning to look like the quick and clean scheme of arrangement could falter – and then itâs anyoneâs bet what might happen. Worst case scenario for Blackstone is the whole deal falls apart. The question is: would that also be the worst case scenario for the hedge fund investors – or could that be exactly what they are gambling on?
Itâs been a big week for AI developments, including news from YouTube, Anthropic, AI:OK, Stability and Apple
It was reported that YouTube is in talks with all three major record companies about the next phase in its AI experiments. It wants to build on its Dream Track pilot, which involved ten artists, and allows YouTube creators to use AI to generate vocals that imitate those artists. Sources say that YouTube is now offering lump sum payments to try and get dozens of major label artists to collaborate in its next generative AI project.Â
Universal Music has previously commended YouTube for working with the music industry on its generative AI experiments, rather than using existing music to train AI models without permission. Unlike, say, Anthropic, which is accused by the music publishers of training its chatbot Claude with their lyrics without permission. They filed a lawsuit against the AI company in Tennessee, but this week a judge said the legal battle should be fought in California.Â
The music industry is keen to encourage AI companies to work with record labels and music publishers, partly by suing (or threatening to sue) those who donât, but also by championing those that do. This week a new scheme was launched called AI:OK which seeks to identify what constitutes the responsible use of music in AI – and AI in music – and to kitemark the companies and platforms that meet those criteria.Â
Elsewhere in AI related stories this week, Stability announced a new round of funding and the appointment of Napster co-founder and early Spotify advisor Sean Parker as Chair, and Apple said that rules in the EUâs Digital Markets Act will delay the roll out of some of its new features in Europe, including generative AI tool Apple Intelligence.
ICYMI:
🍎 The European Commission has published details of why it thinks that Appleâs App Store rules are still not compliant with the European Unionâs Digital Markets Act. It specifically focuses on the rules around the sign-posting of alternative payment options within iOS apps, something that Spotify has been particularly vocal about. âOur preliminary position is that Apple does not fully allow steeringâ, says Margrethe Vestager, the Commissionâs EVP in charge of competition policy. Apple changed its rules so that developers are allowed to sign-post users towards alternative payment options. However, there are restrictions on how that works, and Apple currently charges a 12-27% commission on any purchases that begin with a link in an iOS app.
🦵 Belfast rappers Kneecap have secured permission from the high court to take legal action against the UK government over its blocking of a grant from the Music Export Growth Scheme. Kneecap member DJ PrĂłvaĂ insisted that the bandâs legal action was not about the money they lost when their grant was blocked, but the principle of the governmentâs conduct. The governmentâs decision, he said, was âan attack on artistic culture, an attack on the Good Friday Agreement and an attack on us and our way of expressing ourselvesâ. It emerged earlier this year that Kneecapâs application for MEGS funding had been approved by a music industry panel but then blocked by the department of Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch, seemingly because of the groupâs political views. The groupâs lawyer Darragh Mackin said this week that Badenochâs intervention to block the grant was an attack on identity, freedom of expression and the fundamentals of the Good Friday Agreement.
🤡 A Live Nation investor has sued members of the live giantâs board – including CEO Michael Rapino and CFO Joe Berchtold – in response to the recent filing of legal action against the company by the US Department Of Justice. The government department accuses Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary of anticompetitive conduct, and has asked the court to force Live Nation to sell off the Ticketmaster business it acquired back in 2010. The government’s legal action, shareholder John Williams claims, will âseverely damage and injureâ Live Nation and its shareholders. This is the fault of the board members, Williams alleges, because following the Live Nation/Ticketmaster merger they âcontinued to cause Live Nation to engage in anticompetitive conductâ in âdefianceâ of a consent decree agreed with the DoJ.Â
💸 Festival operator Superstruct has been acquired by investment firm KKR. Financial terms of the deal are not known, but the business was estimated to be valued at ÂŁ1.5 billion earlier this year. Founded by equity firm Providence and Cream founder and former Live Nation exec James Barton in 2017, Superstruct runs festivals including Sonar, BenicĂ ssim, Sziget, Bluedot and Boardmasters. In a joint statement, KKR partners Philipp Freise and Franziska Kayser said Superstruct has established itself as âa leader in delivering unparalleled live music experiences globallyâ. Superstructâs portfolio of events now consists of 80 music festivals across nine European countries and Australia, giving them a potential reach of nearly seven million attendees.
🇫🇷 A consortium led by founder Denis Ladegaillerie has completed an âamicable buybackâ of Believe shares, with an âoverwhelmingâ majority of shareholders tendering at âŹ15 per share. Upbeat BidCo, formed for the takeover, now holds 94.99% of Believeâs shares and âat leastâ 94.29% of voting rights. Despite potential for a squeeze-out, Upbeat opted against mandatory action, allowing minority shareholders to retain their stakes. However, with tradable shares falling below 15%, Believe faces removal from certain stock indices, limiting liquidity. The exit of previous investor Ventech, which secured a 36x return on its âŹ175 million investment, marks France’s largest VC exit in a decade.
🎙 Setlist podcast: AI lawsuit warns of âdevastating impactsâ on human creativity
In this week’s Setlist Podcast: Chris Cooke and Andy Malt discuss the launch of the record industryâs first major lawsuits against music-generating AI companies – with the RIAA coordinating litigation against Suno and Udio – plus a group of songwriters are suing PRS.Â
🎧 Click here to listen – or search for âSetlist Podcastâ
And Finally! Would you buy MIAâs $100 tin foil hat?
Are you tired of people laughing at your homemade tin foil hat when you pop out to stock up on cans of beans? Well, donât worry, MIA has you covered. Literally. Sheâs just launched a range of streetwear for the doomsday prepper who also wants to look good.
Under the brand name Ohmni, items on offer include âthe tin foil hat youâve been waiting forâ (a silver bucket hat with copper lining), a âfull shieldâ t-shirt, a âfull protection ponchoâ, âpotency jeansâ (just the crotch area protected, to stop 5G making you infertile), âpotency boxer shortsâ (just to be extra sure), and a âdata protectionâ bag.Â
That ensemble will set you back $950. And thatâs before youâve got a data blocking phone case to allow you to go off grid at any moment. Iâm joking, of course. The back pocket of the jeans is lined with a faraday cage, so you donât need to buy the phone case.
👉 Read the full story and more of this week’s funniest music news