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The Deals: SoundCloud Teams With ‘Print-on-Demand’ Vinyl Supplier, Reservoir Invests in Lightroom

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SoundCloud partnered with elasticStage, a platform that offers a “print-on-demand model” for physical music releases. Through the deal, SoundCloud’s Artist Pro users can list their vinyl releases for sale on a dedicated website and sell vinyl on demand as orders come in. ElasticStage handles all processing, shipping and customer service requests. “Vinyl sales have surged over 300% since 2016, yet most independent artists have been excluded from this growth due to high manufacturing costs and logistical limitations,” said SoundCloud CEO Eliah Seton in a statement, adding that the “partnership is another step toward ensuring that every artist — no matter their size — has the tools to build a sustainable career.” Artists can join the waitlist here.

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Reservoir Media invested in London-based entertainment company Lightroom, which develops immersive entertainment experiences around IP — which Reservoir will provide as part of the deal. According to a press release, Lightroom is in five cities and will be in 12 by the end of 2025. The release reports that Lightroom’s experiences have played to more than one million visitors globally. “We see meaningful opportunity in this high-growth vertical, and this investment is an opportunity to enhance the value of our music assets, capitalizing on milestone moments, as well as our evergreen music catalog, to create shows rooted in IP,” said Reservoir founder/CEO Golnar Khosrowshahi in a statement.

Music rights technology company Chordal signed a multi-year deal with TikTok for the platform’s pre-cleared commercial music library (CML). Through the pact, rights holders of fractionally owned songs can use Chordal’s enterprise synch licensing technology, InstantClear, to opt into TikTok’s CML, pre-clear their fractional shares and automate payments. “We are looking to help evolve the micro-licensing industry to take advantage of the speed and scale of digital advertising and short-form video,” said Chris Marion, manager of commercial music at TikTok, in a statement. “Our goal is to provide brands with a safe, expansive library of music to use in their content, while opening up new revenue streams for the artists that power it.”

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Symphonic Distribution signed a deal to utilize the IP enforcement services of Third Chair (previously known as Watchdog) to monitor social media usages of music under Symphonic’s Bodega Sync division. According to a press release, Third Chair “makes it easy for anyone to monitor social media for brand use of their content, streamline licensing negotiations, and recover missed revenue without adding headcount.” Symphonic CEO/founder Jorge Brea said of the deal, “Our partnership with Third Chair is a natural fit as the issues around music usage on social media become more pronounced, and we look forward to putting their IP monitoring and monetization solutions into the hands of all our independent music creators.”

Legends/ASM Global renewed its partnership with the Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority in Michigan, extending its contract as venue manager and food & beverage operator for Van Andel Arena, DeVos Performance Hall and the DeVos Place convention center — and, in the future, Acrisure Amphitheater (set to open in May 2026) and Amway Stadium (spring 2027). The agreement amendment takes effect on July 1, 2026, for a 15-year period, with a 10-year renewal option.

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Universal Music India signed a licensing agreement with physical music distributor Blisstainment. Under the deal, Blisstainment will be the official licensor and distributor of vinyl records from Universal Music India’s repertoire domestically, including remastered vinyl editions of Hindi film soundtracks and I-pop albums. The first three releases via the pact are the soundtracks of the films Bombay, Yeh Vada Raha and Rocky.

Downtown-owned B2B distributor FUGA signed a global partnership with Arketyp Group, a new indie label founded by Swedish music manager and YEAR0001 label co-founder Oskar Ekman. FUGA will provide digital and physical distribution, marketing support and synch services across Arketyp’s artist and label client rosters, which includes artists on YEAR0001 — a FUGA client since 2022. Under the expanded Arketyp umbrella, the label has released music from punk band Viagra Boys and Miike Snow.

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Antwerp, Belgium-based management and booking agency Darkroom Bookings joined Tomorrowland’s artist agency One World Artists. With the move, Darkroom brings four emerging artists — NOVAH, BYØRN, Callush, and EMILIJA — to the One World roster.

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Spotify’s Stock Tumbled After Its Mixed Q2 Earnings — But Analysts See the Bigger Picture

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Some earnings results are more difficult to interpret than others, and Spotify’s were no exception. Like Universal Music Group’s Q2 earnings, which contained a jumble of metrics headed in opposite directions, the streaming giant’s results were a mixed bag of wins and losses — a contrast to previous quarters when the metrics were in much better alignment.

The market seemed to take the Spotify results poorly, as the company’s share price dropped more than 11% following Tuesday’s earnings release. (Importantly, a pullback of that scope isn’t a surprise given Spotify’s share price was up 112% over the last year through Monday, July 28.) Analysts, however, were more sanguine and focused on the company’s long-term prospects rather than the quarter-to-quarter bumpiness.

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Some of the factors that influenced Spotify’s mixed quarter were under its control (subscriber growth, lower-than-expected advertising performance). But some factors were out of its control (foreign exchange losses) while others were a combination of external and internal forces (higher stock-based compensation expense related to Spotify’s soaring share price). That’s a lot to digest.

Spotify’s earnings results highlighted the tension between investors’ desire for neat, linear growth and the untidy realities for companies that report earnings every three months. For a variety of reasons, some quarters will be better than others, and CEO Daniel Ek encouraged investors “to be prepared” for those instances where Spotify spends more money to grow the business over the long term.

A drop in advertising prices, for example, might spur Spotify to “double or triple” its marketing expense, Ek explained. “We generally expect to see more efficiencies as we’re leveraging better and better tools,” he said, “but sometimes that efficiency may mean that the right thing is to actually spend more in the short term to then get it back in the long term.” Translation: The path to success isn’t a straight line.

Equity analysts, who love a clean narrative as much as anybody, tried to make sense of the contrasting indicators. J.P. Morgan analysts called it a “messy” quarter for its mix of positives and negatives. Some analysts slightly lowered their forecasts for revenue and operating income. Everybody pointed to the fact that Spotify will encounter some bumps in the road as it makes investments (which are a drag on earnings) in pursuit of long-term growth (which, to Ek’s point, could help earnings down the road).

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But there was nothing in Spotify’s results and executives’ comments that changed analysts’ overall theses. Investors want to see year-over-year growth every quarter, but analysts know that isn’t realistic. In their notes to investors, analysts focused on long-term opportunities to attract subscribers, benefits from current investments and Spotify’s ability to generate additional revenue.

Analysts believe that Spotify will continue to succeed if it makes the platform more engaging. Some of them homed in on two statistics that Spotify mentioned during the earnings call: 350 million users have streamed a video podcast, and video consumption is growing 20 times faster than audio-only consumption. Spotify’s investments in AI could also lead to better engagement. Spotify now has AI playlists in 40 countries, and user engagement with its AI DJ has “nearly doubled” in the last year, Gustav Söderström said during Tuesday’s earnings call.

Another factor in long-term growth is Spotify’s ability to generate revenue in different ways. For most of its history, Spotify has made money selling ads and subscriptions based on music listening. That has changed in recent years, and J.P. Morgan analysts believe the company has the ability to improve monetization outside of the record label/music publisher royalty structure. In other words, podcasts and audiobooks have the potential to help drive revenue without giving 70% of that revenue to music rights holders.

In the end, analysts’ valuation models didn’t change much, if at all. Guggenheim lowered its price target to $800 from $840 and maintained its buy rating. J.P. Morgan maintained its $740 price target. Cantor Fitzgerald left its $640 price target unchanged and reiterated its neutral rating. Bernstein kept its $840 price target and outperform rating. There’s a $200 variance in price targets within those four examples. But considering Spotify closed Friday at $627.15, it’s clear all the analysts feel there is upside for investors willing to hold on through occasional rough terrain.  

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Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page Settles Lawsuit Over Decades-Old ‘Dazed and Confused’ Credits Dispute

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Led Zeppelin‘s Jimmy Page and a songwriter have reached a settlement to resolve the latest lawsuit over the disputed credits to the band’s iconic song “Dazed and Confused,” according to new court filings.

The agreement, filed in court Friday (Aug. 1), will quickly end a copyright case filed this spring by Jake Holmes, a songwriter who has claimed for years that he actually wrote “Dazed and Confused” and that Page simply performed it without credit or payment.

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Terms of the deal were not disclosed in public filings, other than to say that it “resolves the entire case” and will be formalized in the weeks ahead. Notice of the settlement was filed by attorneys for Holmes and was not signed by lawyers for Page or other defendants.

Reps for Page did not return a request for comment. An attorney for Holmes declined to comment.

Holmes wrote and recorded “Dazed and Confused” in 1967; Page later reworked it into a song for his band The Yardbirds, then into the famed 1969 Zeppelin track. Decades later, in 2010, Holmes filed a copyright lawsuit against Page. That case quickly settled, and the credits for Zeppelin’s track now say it was “written Jimmy Page, inspired by Jake Holmes.”

But in May, Holmes sued Page again, accusing the legendary rocker of flouting that earlier agreement and violating his rights. The case centered on newly released recordings of Yardbirds performances and the recent documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin.

“By falsely claiming that the Holmes composition is the Page composition, … Page [and others] have willfully infringed the Holmes composition,” Holmes’ lawyers write. “Defendants…have ignored plaintiff’s cease and desist demand and continue to infringe.”

The case against Page was still in the earliest stages, and he and the various other defendants (which also included music publisher Warner Chappell and film studio Sony Pictures) had not yet formally responded to the accusations with court filings of their own.

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Justin Timberlake’s *NSYNC Bandmate Shows Support After Lyme Disease Reveal: ‘That’s Superhero Status’

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Chris Kirkpatrick says his *NSYNC bandmate Justin Timberlake “showed me a whole new level of strength” in the wake of Timberlake’s announcement that he has Lyme disease on Thursday (July 31).

Kirkpatrick took to Instagram to show support for Timberlake, who struggled with Lyme disease on his recent Forget Tomorrow World Tour, which closed out last night.

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“Watching him battle Lyme disease day in and day out, while still getting on that stage night after night, was something I’ll never forget,” Kirkpatrick wrote under a photo of himself, Timberlake and fellow *NSYNC members Lance Bass and JC Chasez. “The long days, the travel, the exhaustion — and yet, he never gave up. No complaints, no excuses — just heart, grit, and pure determination.”

Kirkpatrick added about Timberlake, “That kind of resilience is rare.”

In a vulnerable Instagram post Thursday (July 31), Timberlake shared photos from his time on the road and wrote, “As I’m reflecting on the tour and festival tour — I want to tell you a little bit about what’s going on with me.” 

Timberlake went on to announce, “Among other things, I’ve been battling some health issues, and was diagnosed with Lyme disease — which I don’t say so you feel bad for me — but to shed some light on what I’ve been up against behind the scenes.”

“If you’ve experienced this disease or know someone who has — then you’re aware: living with this can be relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically,” he continued. “When I first got the diagnosis I was shocked for sure. But, at least I could understand why I would be onstage and in a massive amount of nerve pain or, just feeling crazy fatigue or sickness. I was faced with a personal decision. Stop touring? Or, keep going and figure it out. I decided the joy that performing brings me far outweighs the fleeting stress my body was feeling. I’m so glad I kept going.”

Continuing his support, Kirkpatrick wrote: “I couldn’t be more proud to call him my friend. Tour life is already a grind, but doing it while fighting Lyme disease? That’s superhero status.”

Kirkpatrick concluded his post with, “Here’s to strength, perseverance, and one hell of a tour. Love you little bro.”

Timberlake isn’t the first musician who’s publicly shared his Lyme diagnosis, with Shania Twain, Avril Lavigne, Justin Bieber and more stars also previously speaking about their struggles with the illness.

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