Bob Dylan sells entire recording catalogue to Sony

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Hailing the singer-songwriter’s “unrivalled genius”, Rob Stringer, Sony Music Group’s chairman, said: “Columbia Records has had a special relationship with Bob Dylan from the beginning of his career and we are tremendously proud and excited to be continuing to grow and evolve our ongoing 60-year partnership.”

Dylan also lauded the agreement in a statement: “Columbia Records and Rob Stringer have been nothing but good to me for many, many years and a whole lot of records. I’m glad that all my recordings can stay where they belong.”

Sony said it planned to collaborate with Dylan on “a range of future catalogue reissues in the artist’s renowned and top-selling Bootleg Series”, a project that began in 1991 and has seen the artist make public more rare, previously unreleased studio and live material.

The terms also allow Sony to partner with Dylan “on additional projects”.

In 2020 Dylan released his 39th studio album – Rough and Rowdy Ways – to critical acclaim.

At 80 years old he continues to tour extensively, just Monday announcing a string of new dates in the US South, part of a worldwide run slated to continue into 2024.

Dylan’s deal with Sony is separate from his blockbuster publishing sale to Universal.

US singer Bob Dylan performs at the Pavillon de Paris in France in July 1978. Photo: AFP

US singer Bob Dylan performs at the Pavillon de Paris in France in July 1978. Photo: AFP

The holders of master recording rights can dictate future reissues, while publishing rights owners receive a cut in a number of scenarios, including radio play and streaming, album sales, and use in advertising and films.

The prolific Dylan has been covered countless times, making his songwriting catalogue particularly valuable.

His publishing deal with Universal was one of the highest-profile sales that preceded a flurry of music catalogue transactions over the past year or so, as financial markets are increasingly drawn to music portfolios as an asset class.

The trend is driven in large part by the anticipated stability of streaming growth combined with low interest rates and dependable earning projections for time-tested hits. It is also useful for artists focused on estate planning.

Companies have acquired a number of major catalogues including from David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Nicks, Paul Simon, Motley Crue, The Red Hot Chili Peppers and Shakira.

Springsteen sold both his publishing and recorded music rights to Sony for a staggering US$500 million.

And earlier this month Bowie’s estate sold the late singer’s publishing rights to Warner Chappell Music.

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