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Concord (entertainment company)

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(Redirected from Concord Theatricals)
Alchemy Copyrights
Concord
Formerly
  • Concord Bicycle Music (2015–2017)
  • Concord Music (2018–2019)
Company typePrivate
IndustryEntertainment
Predecessor
Founded2015
HeadquartersNashville, Tennessee
Key people
John Robert (Bob) Valentine (CEO since 2023)[1][2][3]
Stephen (Steve) Smith (chairman since 2013)[4][5][6][7]
Jim Selby (chief publishing officer since 2021)[8][6]
Steven Salm (chief business development officer)[9][6]
Vincent Scott (Scott) Pascucci (director)[1][10]
Jonathan (Jake) Wisely (director)[6][11]
Revenue$448 million (2020)[12]
OwnerState of Michigan Retirement Systems (93%)[13][a]
Number of employees
700
DivisionsConcord Label Group
Concord Music Publishing
Concord Theatricals
Concord Originals
SubsidiariesBoosey & Hawkes

Rodgers and Hammerstein

Kidz Bop
Websitewww.concord.com

Concord, the assumed business name of Alchemy Copyrights LLC,[12][14] is an independent American holding company dealing in creative rights primarily in the music industry.[15][16] It develops, manages and acquires sound recordings, music publishing rights, theatrical performance rights and narrative content. It has been funded by Barings LLC (until 2016 Wood Creek Capital Management), by Sound Investors and by members of its management team.

Concord holds rights to more than 1.3 million[17][18] songs, composed works, plays, musicals and active recordings.[19][20] In 2020, 45% of its revenue came from music, 38% from music publishing and 17% from theatricals.[12] As of 2023, according to its CEO, it derived 85% of its revenue "from catalog, rather than newly-developed, music".[21][b]

Headquartered in Nashville with additional offices in Los Angeles, New York City, London, Berlin, Melbourne and Miami and staff in Auckland, Sydney, Toronto and Tokyo, Concord's repertoire is licensed in virtually every country and territory worldwide.[23]

History

[edit]

Concord Jazz (1973–1994)

[edit]

Auto dealer and jazz enthusiast Carl Jefferson started the Concord Jazz record label in 1973. He sold the label to Alliance Entertainment in 1994,[24] and Glen Barros was appointed as CEO of the resulting company Concord Records.[25]

Concord Records (1994–2004)

[edit]

In 1999, film/television producer Norman Lear and entertainment executive Hal Gaba purchased the company (Concord Jazz and Concord Records) after Alliance filed for bankruptcy.[26] By 2000, the company had begun to receive financial backing from J.P. Morgan & Co.[27]

Concord Music Group (2004–2015)

[edit]

In 2004, Concord Records acquired Fantasy, Inc., owner of Prestige, Fantasy, Milestone, Riverside, Specialty, and the post-Atlantic Stax catalog. Concord then combined with Fantasy to form the Concord Music Group.[28] Several label acquisitions and partnerships followed including Telarc (2005)[26] and Rounder Records (2010).[29]

In 2005, Universal began to distribute Concord's recorded music worldwide, which accounted for about 5% of Universal's US market share in 2020.[12]

In February 2008, Concord Music Group merged with Village Roadshow Pictures to form Village Roadshow Entertainment Group (VREG).[30][31]

In 2010, the State of Michigan Retirement Systems invested its first $25 million into Concord Music Group through Wood Creek Capital Management (a wholly owned unit of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company).[32]

In March 2013, Concord Music Group was acquired from Village Roadshow Entertainment Group by an investor group led by Wood Creek Capital Management and Sound Investors LLC for an estimated $120 million.[33] Many of the same investors also owned a majority interest in independent music publisher Bicycle Music Company.[34] Norman Lear retired to become chairman emeritus, replaced by Steve Smith who joined Concord Music Group from the new owner consortium along with Scott Pascucci.[33][1] Smith, who had co-founded the music industry tip sheet Album Network in the late 1970s[4][35] and sold it to Network Magazine Group and SJS Entertainment, itself acquired by SFX Entertainment in 1998,[35] had been the president of SFX briefly in 2000[36] and chief operating officer of SFX's successor Clear Channel Entertainment from 2001 to 2002.[37] He had acquired Bicycle Music in 2004, where he worked with Jake Wisely and partnered up with Steven Salm of Wood Creek in 2006 to boost the company's financing.[38][4][9] By the end of April 2013, Smith was chairman of a company called Alchemy Copyrights.[4]

Concord Bicycle Music (2015–2017)

[edit]

On October 28, 2014, Alchemy Copyrights LLC was incorporated, with its headquarters registered as Wilmington, Delaware.[39] On December 23, 2014, its Nashville-based subsidiary and namesake was formed.[40]

On April 1, 2015, Concord Music Group, still led by Glen Barros, announced its merger with Bicycle Music, owned by Wood Creek and led by Jake Wisely.[41][42] The merged companies became subsidiaries of Concord Bicycle Music, a portfolio company of Wood Creek, with Scott Pascucci as CEO. The Concord Music Group division oversaw recorded music activities, and the Bicycle Music Company division managed publishing and rights.[43] As Concord Bicycle Music, the company acquired Razor & Tie, Vanguard Records, Sugar Hill Records, Wind-up Records, Fearless Records,[44][45] and Musart Music Group including its Edimusa publishing arm (2016).[46]

Following the merger announcement, the Delaware parent and the California branch of Concord Bicycle Assets LLC were incorporated on October 21 and 22, 2015, respectively.[47][48]

On June 2, 2017, Concord Bicycle Music purchased European-based publishing company Imagem Music Group[9] from a Dutch pension fund.[49] After acquiring two theatrical licensing companies, Tams-Witmark Music Library and Samuel French in 2018, the company formed its own Theatricals division.[50]

Concord (2017–present)

[edit]

During 2017, the Concord Music Group, Bicycle Music and Imagem divisions of Concord Bicycle Music were consolidated as Concord Music, and Barros was appointed as chief operating officer.[25][51][c]

In 2017, a streaming rights deal signed between Universal and Spotify gave Concord access to Spotify's marketing tools.[12]

By 2018, in the estimation of its chief business development officer Steve Salm, the company's revenue placed it in between "corporate giants" and "most indies", which gave it "an advantage in deals".[53]

The name Concord Music remained in use until early 2019.[54] By May 1, 2019, the company was restyled as Concord.[55][56][d] Concord Music had described itself as "a wholly owned subsidiary"[51] or as "the operating entity of Alchemy Copyrights LLC, an investment company that is owned by Barings Alternative Investments,[e] Sound Investors, and seventy institutional and individual partners, including forty members of Concord Music's management team".[57][58] After rebranding, Concord would define itself as "a private company funded by long-term institutional capital and members of Concord's management team".[59][27][49] By July 2020, Alchemy Copyrights was trading as Concord; the State of Michigan Retirement System was its "ultimate parent".[12]

On January 1, 2021, Jake Wisely, the former Bicycle Music CEO and a partner at Concord, was succeeded by Jim Selby as the chief publishing executive of Concord and joined its board of directors.[6]

On April 26, 2021, Concord acquired Downtown's copyrights consisting of 145,000 owned and co-published copyrights for $300 million.[60]

In late 2021, incoming interest prompted Concord majority owner, the Michigan State Retirement System, to consider a sale of its stake in the company. "We got some very strong bids, and we passed on all of them," commented the then Concord CEO Scott Pascucci. Pascucci reported that Concord received several bids that were "extremely aggressive" but none that were "extraordinary plus."[61]

In September 2022, Concord purchased the publishing and recorded music catalogues of Tony Banks, Phil Collins, and Mike Rutherford, as well as the publishing and recorded music catalogue from their years in the band Genesis.[62]

In December 2022, Concord successfully closed $1.8 billion of senior notes, secured by a significant portion of its diversified catalogue of sound recordings and songs. Led by Apollo Global Management and assisted by J.P. Morgan, it was the largest asset-backed securitization offering of music rights in the industry to date in terms of both size of issuance and number of assets (over one million copyrights). Proceeds from the issuance were to be reinvested to support Concord's continued growth in 2023 and beyond.[63][64]

On July 1, 2023, Bob Valentine (previously the chief financial officer[27]) replaced Scott Pascucci as CEO, and Pascucci was appointed to the board of directors.[1]

On August 11, 2023, Concord,[f] together with its distributor Universal Music Group and Sony Music, the two music industry giants, sued the Internet Archive over its Great 78 Project for $621 million in damages from alleged copyright infringement. The charge was filed before the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on the date of its final ruling in the Hachette v. Internet Archive case.[66][67][68]

In September 2023, it was announced Concord had acquired the music publishing catalog of the New York, Nashville, and London-based music publisher, Mojo Music & Media. The catalog includes works of bands such as REO Speedwagon, Kiss, and Cheap Trick.[69]

Additionally in September 2023, Concord[g] made an offer to acquire the entirety of Round Hill Music Royalty Fund (RHM) – the UK-listed fund operated by Round Hill Music. In October 2023, the RHM shareholders approved the acquisition, with over 99% of shareholders supporting the deal. With this transaction, Concord exceeded the $2 billion mark in its spending "across recorded music, music publishing and theatricals" since the 2015 merger.[18]

Divisions

[edit]

Concord Music Publishing

[edit]

In 2017, when Concord purchased the Imagem Music Group, it tripled the size of its catalog bringing it to nearly 800,000 copyrights. The Imagem purchase also brought classical music publisher Boosey & Hawkes and The Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization into Concord Music Publishing. Concord's publishing catalog now includes a vast array of popular music, classical music and many song and stage standards.[70]

As of 2022, Concord Music Publishing's active roster includes The 1975,[71] Glen Ballard,[72] Fiona Bevan,[73] BIA,[74] Jason Robert Brown,[75] Tofer Brown,[76] Daft Punk,[77] Davido,[78] Chase + Status,[79] Cautious Clay,[80] Jacob Collier,[81] Denzel Curry,[82] James Earp,[83] Jasper Harris,[84] Ruston Kelly,[85] Tom Kitt,[86] Hillary Lindsey,[87] Duff McKagan,[88] Lori McKenna,[89] Josh Miller,[90] Justin Parker,[91] Steve Reich,[92] John Adams,[93] Steve Robson,[94] Mark Ronson,[95] Anthony Rossomando,[71] Biff Stannard, Varren Wade,[96] Walshy Fire,[97] Tion Wayne,[71] Eric Whitacre,[98] Oh Wonder[99] and Yola.

Concord Music Publishing's catalog of songwriters and composers includes Benny Blanco,[100][71] Leonard Bernstein[101] Sammy Cahn,[102] Phil Collins,[103] Willie Colón,[104] Aaron Copland,[105] John Fogerty,[106] Marvin Hamlisch,[107] Oscar Hammerstein II,[92] Imagine Dragons,[108] Iron Maiden,[109] Robert Johnson,[110] Cyndi Lauper,[111] Jimmy Napes,[112] Pink Floyd,[113] Sergei Prokofiev,[114] Trent Reznor,[115] Richard Rodgers,[92] Santigold,[116] Joan Sebastian,[117] Pete Seeger,[118] Nikki Sixx,[71] Igor Stravinsky[92] and Ryan Tedder.[116]

In January 2020, Concord acquired a stake in PULSE Music Group, a move into chart-focused A&R.[119] Effective July 2020, Concord will administer the catalog and future signings for PULSE, an additional 10,000 songs.[120] PULSE's current songwriter roster includes James Blake, Cordae, Trevor Daniel, El-P, Brent Faiyaz,[121] FNZ, Tyler Johnson, Kehlani, Bonnie McKee, OG Parker, OZ, Rich The Kid, Starrah, Ty Dolla $ign, and YEBBA.[122] The PULSE roster is credited with over 150 million units of recorded music sales, 10 billion streams and more than 250 Platinum and Gold RIAA certifications.[123]

Concord Music Publishing has also launched the new, Nashville-based talent and creative development venture Hang Your Hat Music, in partnership with GRAMMY®, CMA and ACM awarded songwriter Hillary Lindsey.[124]

In April 2021, Concord acquired the roster and catalogue of Downtown Music Publishing bringing its catalog to nearly 600,000 works.[125]

In August 2022, Concord acquired Australian music publisher Native Tongue, effectively launching Concord Music Publishing ANZ.[126]

Concord Label Group

[edit]

Concord Label Group is made up of the original Concord Music Group labels at the time of the Bicycle Music merger (wholly owned Concord/Rounder, Concord Jazz and Fantasy Records), with Easy Eye Sound and Loma Vista Recordings as Joint Ventures.[127] This area of Concord's business also includes its KIDZ BOP brand and its Craft Recordings catalog division. In early 2019, the company opened an office in Miami for Craft Latino Recordings.[128]

Craft represents the many labels for which these artists' originally recorded, including Sugar Hill, Vanguard, Musart, Savoy Jazz, Stax, Vee-Jay, Fania, Independiente and Varese Sarabande.[129] Craft also represents the R.E.M. catalog originally released under Warner Bros. Records.[130]

In September 2022, Concord acquired the assets of L.A. Reid's HitCo Entertainment.[131]

In June 2023, Concord and PULSE Music Group launched a new label, dubbed PULSE Records. The deal builds on a partnership between Pulse and Concord started in 2020 when Concord's music publishing division acquired a stake in Pulse Music Group to form a joint venture that included Concord administering Pulse's catalog and future signings.[132]

In September 2024, Concord Label Group Merged Concord Records and Fantasy Records, now known as Concord Records. Mark Williams and Margi Cheske are co-presidents.[133]

Concord Records and Jazz

[edit]

Fearless Records

[edit]

Loma Vista Recordings

[edit]

Rounder Records

[edit]

Craft Recordings

[edit]

Craft Latino Recordings

[edit]

Source:[180]

KIDZ BOP

[edit]

Concord's KIDZ BOP label has sold 23 million albums, generated 8 billion streams, has a featured channel on Sirius XM and an international tour under its name.[182][183]

Concord Theatricals

[edit]

Concord purchased theatrical licensing companies Tams-Witmark[184] and Samuel French, and combining then with R&H Theatricals, launched its Theatrical division in 2018.[185] Concord Theatricals services both creators and producers of musicals and plays with theatrical licensing, script publishing and cast recordings. It also develops, licenses, produces and invests in musicals and plays for production.[185]

The professional and amateur theatrical licensing catalog includes Samuel French, R&H Theatricals and Tams-Witmark, representing the works of Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, George & Ira Gershwin, Rodgers and Hart, Cole Porter, Kurt Weill, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Jule Styne, Comden and Green, Charles Strouse & Lee Adams, Cy Coleman, Jerry Herman, Kander and Ebb and Marvin Hamlisch, and shows and songs by musical theater composers Lin-Manuel Miranda, Adam Guettel, Jason Robert Brown, Shaina Taub and Michael John LaChiusa.[185]

Concord Theatricals also licenses hundreds of Broadway musicals including The Wizard of Oz, A Chorus Line, Hello Dolly, Bye Bye Birdie, Dreamgirls, Hair, Gypsy, SIX[186], Spongebob The Musical[187] and Hadestown[188].

Playwrights include George S. Kaufman, Lindsay and Crouse, Agatha Christie, Thornton Wilder, Noël Coward, Tennessee Williams, Neil Simon, Edward Albee, Lorraine Hansberry, Tom Stoppard, Caryl Churchill, August Wilson, Harvey Fierstein, Ken Ludwig, Dominique Morisseau, Anne Washburn and Mac Rogers.[20]

Concord Theatricals also works with Andrew Lloyd Webber and the Really Useful Group to license the composer and his collaborators' musicals, including Jesus Christ Superstar, School of Rock, Evita, Cats, and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.[189]

Concord Theatricals is a co-producer on the currently running Broadway shows Hadestown and the 2022 revival of Into The Woods for which Concord Theatricals/Craft Recordings released the cast album.[190][191] The Into the Woods (2022 Broadway Cast Recording) won the GRAMMY Award for Best Music Theater Album on February 5, 2023.[192]

Concord Originals

[edit]

In 2019, Concord formed a Film & Television Development and Production Department to oversee all long-form audio-visual content produced by both Concord and third-party companies.[193] In 2021, the Company launched Concord Originals as its narrative content creation business that will focus on developing and producing stories anchored by Concord's artists, music and[194] theatrical works. The division's slate consists of feature films, series, documentaries and podcasts, including remakes and re-imaginings of properties from Concord's iconic portfolio.[195]

Concord Originals recently executive produced Billie, a documentary about Billie Holiday which premiered at Telluride Film Festival in 2019.[196] The business is in development on several major screen projects based on iconic musicals by Rodgers & Hammerstein: a TV series reimagining of Oklahoma!, which Concord Originals is producing alongside Skydance TV, a remake of The King and I with Temple Hill at Paramount Pictures and a contemporary take on Flower Drum Song with Daniel Dae Kim's 3AD and Janet Yang Productions.[197] Additional announced projects include a scripted series centering the history-making label Fania with Sherry Marsh, Jorge Granier and Sergio Pizzolante, an elevated genre film inspired by the music of blues legend Robert Johnson and a scripted podcast that tells the story behind the classic Mexican ballad Peregrina with Prodigal Entertainment.[198][199] Concord Originals has also partnered with Skydance and Jennifer Lopez's Nuyorican Productions to develop a slate of original projects based on Concord's catalog of theatrical works.[200]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Due to being a government entity, SMRS is represented by an independent third-party fiduciary on the board. It has provided external equity funding for Concord's acquisitions.[12]
  2. ^ Catalog music is defined as older than 18 months.[22]
  3. ^ At the time of the Imagem acquisition in June 2017, the company still went by Concord Bicycle Music.[52]
  4. ^ Concord had already appeared in press under this name in mid-2018.[53]
  5. ^ Wood Creek, the owner of Concord since 2013, was merged by its owner, Mass Mutual, with Baring Asset Management and two other investment firms to form Barings LLC in September 2016.
  6. ^ The legal entity involved is Concord Bicycle Assets LLC.[65]
  7. ^ The legal entity involved was a British subsidiary of Concord, Concord Cadence Limited.[14]

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[edit]
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