Major Labels

Warner Music Signs YouTube Deal “Under Very Difficult Circumstances”

WmgWarner Music Group has become the first of the major music groups to sign a new deal with YouTube. But just hours after the signing, WMG chief Steve Cooper sent a now leaked memo to his staff admitting that the deal was made under "very difficult" conditions.

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Youtube_logoA new short term deal by Warner Music Group means that the label's artists will remain available on YouTube.  But WMG CEO Steve Cooper admits that the deal was not the one that he wanted.

While the terms of WMG's YouTube deal were not disclosed, a leaked memo says it's the best deal can get because of the protections that the video sharing site receives under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).

image from www.wmg.com“We secured the best possible deals under very difficult circumstances,” Cooper wrote in a memo to his staff. "Our fight… continues to be hindered by the leverage that ‘safe harbor’ laws provide YouTube and other user-uploaded services,” Cooper wrote. “There’s no getting around the fact that, even if YouTube doesn’t have licenses, our music will still be available but not monetized at all. Under those circumstances, there can be no free-market ‘willing buyer, willing seller’ negotiation.”

WMG CEO Steve Cooper's Leaked Memo To Staff On YouTube Deal [FULL TEXT]

WMG won some concessions including better ad monetization, according to several sources, along with better rates from YouTube Red, Google's paid music and video subscription service. 

Why A Deal Now?

Lyor cohenTwo factors may have driven WMG to become the first of the three major music groups to cut a new deal with YouTube. Ross' predecessor, Lyor Cohen, who still has many supporters within the company, was recently named YouTube's Global Head Of Music; and WMG reports its financials to investors and debtholders on Monday morning May 8th.

Irving Azoff Is Skeptical

Whatever pressures drove the undisclosed deal, some in the industry are already critical of it. 

irving“It will indeed be a good day for artists if Warner listened to the creative community and obtained the technical improvements that allow artists to choose when and how to put their music on YouTube, and for artists to receive a marketplace rate that is comparable to the rates paid by platforms like Apple and Spotify,"Irving Azoff told Billboard. "If there was no progress made on either control nor compensation, then it is a step backwards." 

MORE: YouTube Comments On "Difficult" New Warner Music Deal

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4 Comments

  1. Warner should have held out for real proper terms from YouTube, and insisted on proper protection of intellectual property. They have the clout to do so. Else the majors should just pull all their music from YouTube.
    Allowing usage of music on YouTube should be opt-in. An artist should have to opt in before their music is permitted on YouTube, and blocked automatically otherwise.

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