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WEDNESDAY 17 MAY 2017 | COMPLETEMUSICUPDATE.COM | ||||||||||||||||||
TODAY'S TOP STORY: It's been a couple of days since we last reported on anyone filing a lawsuit against the disastrous Fyre Festival, hasn't it? Don't worry, the litigation is still flowing in. Now a ticketing company is suing so that it can refund its customers their money... [READ MORE] | |||||||||||||||||||
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Ticketing company joins the Fyre Festival lawsuit bandwagon Fyre HQ kickstarting a refunds process as soon as it became clear the luxury island event wasn't going to happen. However, ticketing firm Tablelist says it is yet to get back the ticket sales monies it had previously handed over to the event's promoters. As a result, it is unable to action the all of the refunds that have been claimed. The ticketing company says that it passed on 90% of the ticket sales revenue that it processed to the Fyre company, keeping back just 10% in escrow to cover refunds, fees and other charges, which - of course - does not get close to covering all the money now being reclaimed by ticketholders. "Despite announcing that 'all festivalgoers this year will be refunded in full', festival organisers never remitted a penny to Tablelist to pass along to consumers", says the ticketing firm in a statement. "Ticket purchasers are now pursuing millions of dollars in chargebacks - working through their credit card companies to receive refunds - which vastly exceed the depleted escrow fund". Tablelist is seeking $3.5 million to cover those refunds, and to compensate for the damage caused to its business by the Fyre debacle. The company says that the collapse of the festival has already had a significant knock-on effect on its business, resulting in 40% of Tablelist employees being made redundant. As well as the Fyre Festival company itself, the lawsuit also names founders Billy McFarland and Ja Rule as defendants, plus Marketing Director Grant Margolis and investor Carola Jain. It accuses them of breach of contract, and of defrauding both Tablelist and its customers. Like several other lawsuits, Tablelist's legal filing alleges that the whole Fyre event was set up as a fraudulent money-making operation, which was "falsely marketed as an 'exclusive, luxury' event". "Like so many other companies, investors and endorsers, Tablelist - and our customers - are victims of a fraud", says the company's CEO Julian Jung. "Fyre Festival organisers completely left us hanging out to dry as the middleman between this disastrous event and our ticketholders. All the money sits with Fyre, and we're fighting back to get those funds to our customers, where they belong". As previously reported, Fyre HQ sent out forms for ticketholders to fill out in order to process refunds soon after the event was cancelled. Customers were also given the opportunity to exchange their 2017 ticket for a VIP pass to the 2018 edition of the event, in lieu of a refund. A rep for the company at one point claimed that over 80% of people were choosing this option. But even if that is the case, the likelihood of the festival going ahead next year now seems incredibly remote. This legal action brings the number of lawsuits filed in relation to Fyre Festival up to at least eleven. More could still be filed, possibly from other financial backers - including the previously mentioned Carola Jain - or from suppliers and staff who are still owed money. | |||||||||||||||||||
Universal Music signs up with China's Tencent The mega-major says that the "landmark licensing agreement" will "significantly expand the Chinese music market" and "accelerate Universal Music's development of local Chinese artists and repertoire". Oh, and they're going to build a Chinese version of London's famous Abbey Road Studios, which are now a division of Universal, of course. As with Tencent's other deals with the global music players, under this arrangement it will get access to Universal's catalogue for its own streaming platforms, including QQ Music, and will also be the major's distribution partner in China, meaning it will also control the flow of tracks to other streaming services in the region. Anything else? Well, so promises the official announcement of the deal, "both parties will work together to find new ways to develop artists, to innovate business models and to reinforce a robust copyright protection environment. In addition, Tencent will support Universal Music artists to promote their music, leveraging Tencent online properties and other media channels". Good times. Meanwhile Tencent President Martin Lau adds: "We are honoured to be Universal Music's master distribution and licensing partner in China. With extensive user reach and deep industry knowledge, Tencent is the partner of choice for the music industry to engage with music lovers. Our partnership with the world's leading music labels will further demonstrate our commitment to cultivating a vibrant ecosystem that benefits music lovers, artists and songwriters". | |||||||||||||||||||
Pandora considering Ticketfly sale According to Bloomberg, sources have said that selling off Ticketfly would be a back up option if a full sale of the streaming company could not be achieved. This would leave the company focusing solely on streaming, which would suggest a couple of things. First, that diversifying into selling tickets hasn't created the kind of useful lucrative extra revenue stream Pandora hoped. And second, that it thinks it can still turn a profit by providing streaming services alone. As previously reported, Pandora recently raised $150 million in new investment from KKR by creating a load of new shares. This money is seemingly aimed to keep the company - which reported losses of $132 million in the first quarter of this year - afloat long enough to find a buyer. It's likely any new owner would look to streamline the operation in order to boost revenues, which may mean that Ticketfly's sale is assured whatever happens. | |||||||||||||||||||
Merlin signs deal with hi-res streaming audio firm MQA "MQA's commitment is to provide exceptional sound quality from the studio recording all the way through to the consumer", says MQA CEO Mike Jbara. "We're excited to work with the leaders of the independent community to further fuel the availability of master quality recordings for music fans". Merlin CEO Charles Caldas adds: "We are delighted to be partnering with MQA. From our own data, we know that Merlin members' repertoire performs best on paid-for subscription tiers, and it's to this high-spending consumer demographic that hi-resolution audio will have the greatest appeal. Consequently, today's future-facing agreement makes perfect sense - offering our independent label members a fast track entry point to an exciting segment of the streaming market, and ensuring they remain at its forefront". MQA already has deals in place with Universal and Warner, and the format is used by Tidal. | |||||||||||||||||||
The Great Escape kicks off tomorrow During the day, those industry delegates also have access to the TGE Convention programme, at the heart of which sits the CMU Insights @ The Great Escape conferences. Four conferences in one, over the next two days CMU Insights will present The Media Conference, The Drugs Conference, The Export Conference and The Royalties Conference, all taking place in the Dukes @ Komedia cinema. Over the last two weeks we've been identifying the top ten questions we will answer during the four conferences, and you can read up on all of those here... 01: Where does all the streaming money go? For a speedy guide to the programme and speakers, check this post on the CMU Insights blog here. Those looking to dig deeper should follow this CMU Insights blog post, where a range of resources will be appearing over the next three days. Later today a number of articles and a pre-event 'Where We're At' podcast will appear for delegates to read and listen to as they travel to the conference. Plus you'll be able to download the various presentations CMU Insights will deliver this year as they take place in Brighton. More detailed summaries of those insight presentations will also be available to premium CMU subscribers via CMU Trends later this month, while the CMU team will also be reporting on all the discussions that take place this year in the CMU Daily over the coming weeks. If you are heading to Brighton - see you there! -------------------------------------------------- CMU@TGE Top Ten Questions: Can drugs really fuel the creative process? We all know of great songs that were written or recordings that were made supposedly under the influence of one illegal substance or another. It was the drugs that enabled the kind of vision and creativity that resulted in our favourite music, it is sometimes said. But is that true? Or is it myth? And do such myths risk encouraging musicians to adopt lifestyles that could cause them harm? The second half of our Drugs Conference at The Great Escape this year will look at drug taking within the music community. And it will begin by considering the role of drugs - or not - in the music making process. Joining that conversation will be a diverse mix of music makers, each with their own perspective: singer-songwriter and former Babyshambles member Adam Ficek; DJ and producer Andrew Ferguson, aka Nomine; singer-songwriter Chris T-T; and producer and Skint Records founder Damian Harris, aka Midfield General. Jen Long with lead the discussion. While the conclusion of that conversation may well be that certain drugs can fuel creativity, we all know that high levels of consumption can cause damage. The latter sessions of the Drugs Conference will look at addiction, continuing last year's CMU@TGE discussions with regards to how the music industry can better look after the health of its people. We will watch and discuss a new documentary made by Noisey in which grime MC Jammer investigates the effect that habitual skunk use has had on the mental health of himself and other artists within the scene. Then we'll talk to musician/writer Simon Mason about his book 'Too High Too Far Too Soon' and his projects supporting those struggling with addiction, and to musician Jon Stewart - also now an academic at BIMM - who has been studying the pros and cons of the different treatments available. Finally, we'll look at projects and initiatives being run by the likes of Help Musicians UK and the Music Managers Forum that are seeking to put in place support structures to better protect the mental health of artists and everyone working in the music industry. It should make for a fascinating afternoon of conversations and debates, while hopefully spotlighting great initiatives already underway, and identifying what still needs to be done to ensure the health and well-being of the wider music community. | |||||||||||||||||||
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Broken Social Scene announce first album for seven years The album's title track is out now for you to listen to. Check it out here. Some iteration of the band will be in the UK for two live shows this month. Here's where you can see them: 23 May: Manchester, Albert Hall -------------------------------------------------- The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart announce new album "The logistics of [making this album] were so different [to our debut]", says band leader Kip Berman. "When I recorded the record, my wife was six months pregnant. We only had a limited amount of time. There was an absolute uncertainty hanging over our heads, but it was also a kind of escape from worry for that time". Those worries included "what's going to happen when I have a kid? Am I going to be able to go on tour? Is this the last record I'm going to get to make?" he explains. "It's not a bad thing to be worried when you're expecting this huge transition of life. If you didn't feel scared, you're probably not feeling the right emotion. I tried to make the best record I could, knowing it might be the last time". "'The Echo Of Pleasure' could be the near-symmetry of love", he adds, of the album's title. "It's the reflection back and forth, modulating over time, of two people who are together. It's not a mirror - but a perpetual answering and asking. When one person is absent, that echo ceases or, as the title track laments, 'fades into these silent days'. In that sense, remembering is a kind of echo, each instance slightly less vivid than the one before". Listen to first single 'Anymore' here. The band will also be on tour in the UK this month and next. Here are the dates: 24 May: Bristol, Thekla | |||||||||||||||||||
Royal Blood announce UK tour dates To celebrate this news, the duo took part in a Reddit AMA yesterday. Tickets for the live shows go on sale on 26 May. Here are the dates: 13 Nov: Cardiff, Motorpoint Arena | |||||||||||||||||||
Katy Perry, Courtney Barnett, Why?, more Other notable announcements and developments today... Â Katy Perry will be a judge on the all-new coming-back-to-your-screens 'American Idol', it has been confirmed. Broadcaster ABC is "THRILLED". Â Courtney Barnett has released 'How To Boil An Egg' as part of the Milk Records Split Singles Club. "I used to perform this song at all the open mics when I was 21", she says. "It never got recorded, so for personal posterity I updated it and made this version recently when I was bunkered up in the bush doin some demos for my next album". Â Why? have released the video for 'The Barely Blur', taken from their latest album 'Moh Lhean'. The band will be on tour in the UK next month. Â Doldrums has released the video for new single, 'Heater'. Â Cigarettes After Sex have released new single, 'Each Time You Fall In Love'. Their debut album is out on 9 Jun. | |||||||||||||||||||
Travis Scott performs Goosebumps fourteen times at US show Back in 2012, Jay-Z and Kanye West performed their 'Watch The Throne' track 'Niggas In Paris' twelve times at a show in Paris. Scott performed his song two more times than that last Friday, apparently to the delight of the audience. "I want you all to know we just broke a record that was set way, way long ago", Scott told the audience after the thirteenth performance of the song. "We just broke that shit. That 'Niggas In Paris' shit? I think we broke that one ... I'm gonna do fourteen just in case they're like, 'nah, that's not it'". A quick search of the Guinness World Records database suggests that neither West/Z nor Scott's performances are officially recognised as record breakers. But what fun to pay money to see someone play the same song over and over. | |||||||||||||||||||
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