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Hypebot
December 19, 1:03 PM
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Whitney Houston, Cher, Paul Simon and Chaka Khan are among the music legends set to receive Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Recording Academy. The Recording Academy — which presents the Grammys — will recognize Cher, Paul, Chaka and Whitney, who died in 2012, during a Special Merit Awards ceremony on Jan. 31. Carlos Santana will also receive a Lifetime Achievement Award, which honors recipients for their "creative contributions of outstanding artistic significance to the field of recording."
At the same ceremony, Elton John's songwriting partner Bernie Taupin will receive the Trustees Award from the Academy. This honor is given to people who "have made significant contributions, other than performance, to the field of recording."
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December 19, 8:14 AM
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Facebook is testing a system that charges users for sharing web links, in a move that could prove to be a further blow to news outlets and other publishers.
Meta, the social media platform’s owner, said it is carrying out a “limited test” in which those without a paid Meta Verified subscription, costing at least £9.99 a month, can only post two external links a month.
The test appears to involve a subset of Facebook pages and user profiles on Professional Mode, which includes features used by content creators to monetise their posts.
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December 21, 6:29 AM
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Warner Music Canada has laid off at least 24 people amid major global restructuring this year, eliminating positions in marketing, A&R, catalog, and more. As Warner Music Group (WMG) shakes things up in ongoing restructuring efforts, Warner Music Canada has laid off at least 24 people, according to Billboard Canada. Multiple former staffers report that the layoffs came on November 18, the same day that Julia Hummel and Madelaine Napoleone were named as the new Warner Music Canada co-general managers.
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December 20, 3:26 PM
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December 19, 3:28 AM
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TikTok has signed a deal to sell its US business to three American investors – Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX – ensuring the popular social video platform can continue operating in the United States.
The deal is expected to close on 22 January, according to an internal memo seen by he Associated Press and Reuters. The TikTok chief executive officer, Shou Zi Chew, said in the memo that ByteDance and TikTok have signed binding agreements with the three investors.
The new TikTok US joint venture will be 50% held by a consortium of new investors, including Oracle, Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi-based MGX with 15% each. Another 30.1% will be held by affiliates of existing ByteDance investors and 19.9% will be retained by ByteDance, according to the memo.
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December 19, 8:04 AM
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Country music star Jelly Roll has been granted a full pardon from Governor Bill Lee in Tennessee for his past crimes.
The singer, whose real name is Jason DeFord, was among 33 people who received pardons from Lee on Thursday, according to the Associated Press. The 41-year-old was convicted of robbery when he was 17 after he stole $350 from people in a home in 2002, which led to his arrest and a sentence of one year in prison plus probation. Later, in 2008, police discovered marijuana and crack cocaine in his car, leading to eight years of court-ordered supervision.
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December 19, 8:04 AM
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Earlier this month, Sabrina Carpenter and SZA became the latest artists to protest about their music being used in White House social-media posts.
The songs, which both had lyrics or performance context related to handcuffs, were clipped as background to videos of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers handcuffing people on immigration raids.
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December 18, 4:36 PM
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It’s a December tradition like no other: Roasting reading former President Barack Obama’s annual list of favorite movies, books, and songs. This year’s selection includes a cut off Richard Russell’s Everything Is Recorded project, Olivia Dean’s “Nice to Each Other,” Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra,” Laufey’s “Silver Lining,” and BLACKPINK’s “Jump,” among others. (In a
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December 18, 4:21 PM
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The Music Hall Of Williamsburg concert venue in New York City will close at the end of 2026. The Brooklyn-based venue’s promoters, The Bowery Presents, confirmed it will keep hosting shows throughout next year.
The Bowery Presents co-partners Jim Glancy and John Moore made the announcement in a memo obtained by Variety and BrooklynVegan.
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December 18, 2:37 PM
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This week, over 500 prominent members of the entertainment industry officially launched the Creators Coalition on AI (CCAI). The organization seeks to be a "central hub" in developing ethical guidelines for how AI is used in the creative industries.
Core principles: CCAI laid out four pillars of their philosophy on AI:
Transparency, Consent, and Compensation for Content and Data.
Job Protection and Transition Plans.
Guardrails against Misuse and Deepfakes.
Safeguarding Humanity in the Creative Process.
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December 18, 8:11 AM
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Following yesterday’s announcement that Apple Music would soon be available on ChatGPT, the app is now live. Here’s what you can do with it.
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December 18, 7:43 AM
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Spotify has been taking heat in recent months for its decision to accept and run recruitment ads for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.
Now, in an unwelcome end-of-year twist for the company, it’s being threatened by the US administration with new “fees or restrictions” on its business. Not because of anything Spotify has done, but because of intensifying tensions between the US and the European Union.
This being 2025 (and this being this US administration) the threat was made in a post on X by the official United States Trade Representative account.
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December 18, 7:45 AM
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Every year, music-industry economist Will Page publishes his ‘Global Value of Music Copyright’ report. It aggregates revenues for recorded music, publishers and collecting societies – while avoiding double-counting for the latter two.
The aim is to get to a Big Number that reflects recordings and publishing. And that Big Number for 2024 (note, not 2025) is $47.2bn.
“That’s up just $2.3bn (5.2%) on the prior year; growth is slowing largely because this is the first year where the pandemic effects have vanished,” wrote Page in his report. “After years of recovery, we’re now settling back into a steadier state.”
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December 19, 9:43 AM
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Universal Music Group and Roblox have signed a new strategic agreement that will see the companies collaborating to enhance music and commercial integrations across artist and fan experiences. The deal includes the integration of commercial features that aim to drive increased engagement and revenue for artists and labels, with the ability to leverage Shopify for digital and physical merchandise sales.
UMG and Roblox will work to streamline artist and label engagement within the platform, including access to new Roblox tools and beta features.
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December 21, 6:30 AM
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You may not know BubbleUp by name, but you definitely know the company they keep. Their client roster reads like a who’s who of music (and entertainment) royalty — Jimmy Buffett, Toby Keith, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Cody Johnson, Lainey Wilson, Tom Petty, James Brown, Wanda Sykes, The Black Keys, Kelsea Ballerini, Dierks Bentley, Eagles, The Avett Brothers, Khruangbin, Def Leppard, Aerosmith, and many more.
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December 18, 4:18 PM
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Universal Music Group and music creation platform Splice have established a partnership to create AI music tools together, the companies announced on Thursday, the latest in a flurry of AI developments to hit the business in the past several months.
The partnership brings together the world’s largest music company and one of the industry’s biggest music software platforms, though UMG and Splice were vague on the sorts of tools they’d actually be creating beyond saying they’d be “advanced commercial AI tools that can deliver high fidelity and precise expression of artistic intent.”
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December 20, 3:25 PM
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Goose initiated an auction with proceeds benefiting the Brown University Student Emergency Fund in the wake of a shooting at the Providence, Rhode Island Ivy League institution that left two dead. The shooting happened just two miles from where Goose held their Goosemas concerts at Providence’s Amica Mutual Pavilion.
The shooting took place at Brown University on the afternoon of Saturday, December 13, just ahead of Goose’s second of two Goosemas shows. Two students, Ella Cook and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, were killed, and nine other students were injured. The alleged gunman was recently found dead in New Hampshire and is also suspected in the killing of an MIT professor.
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December 18, 4:23 PM
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On Thursday, the board of the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., announced that the historic performing arts venue will be renamed the Trump-Kennedy Center, the White House said.
The vote was announced by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on social media
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December 19, 8:07 AM
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Passim, the Boston folk club and collective announced the 2025 recipients of its Iguana Music Fund, which provides support for New England-based musicians at critical stages of their careers.
The grants provide up to $40,000 to support activities such as community and career building projects including recording, equipment purchases, and event creation.
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December 19, 8:03 AM
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Musicians and music industry workers with the Musicians For Palestine campaign have published an open letter to Live Nation this week, calling for the live-entertainment giant to cease its operations in Israel.
“We cannot stay silent while Live Nation Israel glorifies the genocidal Israeli military that has killed more than 70,000 Palestinians in Gaza,” states the letter. “We echo long-standing Palestinian calls for accountability over its years of artwashing of Israeli apartheid and now genocide.”
The letter has hundreds of signatures so far, including artists Brian Eno, Massive Attack and Caribou.
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December 18, 4:33 PM
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Perry Farrell and his Jane’s Addiction bandmates appear to have formally buried the hatchet, ending a year of legal warfare and public vitriol that began with an infamous on-stage brawl in Boston.
While the group has reconciled personally, the “truce” confirms the permanent end of the band as members pivot to solo projects.
The resolution was shared in a pair of announcements on the band’s social media channels.
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December 18, 2:40 PM
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An analysis of the industry and trends behind the GRAMMY nominees – Best New Artists are slightly newer. UMG dominate (again). Gender balance slips.
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December 18, 7:46 AM
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YouTube will stop submitting its data to the U.S. Billboard charts next month due to a dispute over how streams are counted, according to an announcement Wednesday from the streamer’s global head of music Lyor Cohen.
At the center of the issue is the methodology by which Billboard counts paid/subscription versus ad-supported (i.e. free) streams: While Billboard updated its chart rules on Monday to upgrade ad-supported streams — increasing from 1:3 to 1:2.5, i.e. 2.5 ad-supported streams now equal one paid/subscription stream — YouTube has long argued that they should be weighted equally.
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December 18, 7:59 AM
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The National Independent Talent Organization (NITO), representing over 60 leading independent management and talent agencies, has issued a formal letter to the U.S. Senate urging the immediate passage of the American Music Fairness Act (AMFA).
The bipartisan legislation seeks to close a decades-old loophole that allows terrestrial AM/FM radio broadcasters to avoid paying performers. Currently, the U.S. is the only democratic nation where artists are not compensated for broadcast airplay, placing American creators in the same category as North Korea and Iran.
While streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music pay royalties to both songwriters and performers, broadcast radio only pays songwriters. This disparity costs American artists an estimated $500 million annually in lost foreign royalties, as many countries withhold payments to U.S. artists because the U.S. does not reciprocate.
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December 18, 7:56 AM
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Is ASCAP systematically underpaying radio performance royalties for non-feature music? A number of production music owners and publishers believe so, and they’ve slapped the PRO with a $123 million lawsuit as a result. Alibi Music, Capp Records, Manhattan Production Music, and eight others, repped by entertainment attorney Richard Busch, submitted that multimillion-dollar complaint to the New York Supreme Court yesterday. A copy of the suit was shared with DMN.
Naming the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) as the lone defendant, the action covers multiple bases in its 16 detail-oriented pages. But at the top level, the plaintiffs maintain that “ASCAP is unreasonably and unfairly diverting over $15 million” in radio royalties from non-feature music owners annually.
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