Bangkok Post

Universal says artists owed transparen­cy over warehouse fire

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The world’s largest music group, Universal, owes artists “transparen­cy” over revelation­s that a 2008 fire devoured some 500,000 recordings in its care, its chief said in an internal memo.

Universal Music Group CEO and chairman Lucian Grainge released the note to staff this week following a bombshell New York Times Magazine investigat­ion that found the blaze tore through a warehouse housing irreplacea­ble master recordings spanning decades.

The work of stars including Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, Sonny and Cher, Joni Mitchell, Eric Clapton, Elton John, Janet Jackson, Nirvana, and Tupac was reportedly engulfed in the flames.

“Let me be clear: we owe our artists transparen­cy,” Grainge — who took up his post three years after the fire — said in the memo published by industry tracker Music Business Worldwide.

“We owe them answers. I will ensure that the senior management of this company, starting with me, owns this,” Grainge said.

News of the loss of such a treasure trove of master recordings — one-ofa-kind source material used to create vinyls, CDs and digital copies — sent shockwaves through the industry, while accusation­s that UMG had downplayed the incident for 11 years sparked an angry backlash.

Howard King, a prominent entertainm­ent lawyer based in Los Angeles, is preparing lawsuits on behalf of a number of artists and could file as early as next week, his office said.

Some artists or their estates negotiate ownership of masters, but even those who don’t expect labels to preserve them for future use; master recordings are the raw material for lucrative reissues and posthumous releases.

Grainge said reports on the fire had “prompted speculatio­n, and having our artists and songwriter­s not knowing whether the speculatio­n is accurate is completely unacceptab­le. Part of owning this is redoubling our efforts to be a leader in preserving the rich cultural legacy upon which our industry is based”.

A subsidiary of French media giant Vivendi headquarte­red in Santa Monica, California, Universal Music Group is considered one of the Big Three music conglomera­tes, alongside Sony Music Entertainm­ent and Warner Music Group.

UMG’s market share is nearly double that of its closest rival Sony, however, thanks to contempora­ry big hitters like Ariana Grande and Drake, and an impressive collection of back catalogues including Frank Sinatra’s and Queen’s.

 ??  ?? Universal Music Group CEO and chairman Lucian Grainge.
Universal Music Group CEO and chairman Lucian Grainge.

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