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Guest post by Dave Brooks of AmplifyTicketing company Songkick has let go most of its staff and is hoping against long odds to win its upcoming lawsuit against Ticketmaster so that investors can recoup some portion of the $90 million they’ve invested in the fan club ticketing service and music discovery app.The small company is working to fulfill its outstanding ticket contracts and finish up some existing business, but operationally the company is not accepting new customers. Its popular song discovery app is now operated by Warner Music Group, whose owner Access Industries invested $80 to $90 million in Songkick. Warner has supposedly taken over the company in what Songkick is calling an “acquisition” but is more akin to a liquidation, according to sources familiar with the situation.“The fact they are trying to spin this as an acquisition is an appropriate ending to a company that has mislead the public and investors since they started raising money and sued Live Nation,” one source tells Amplify.When Songkick filed its lawsuit against Ticketmaster in 2015, it asked a judge in the case for a preliminary injunction, arguing Ticketmaster was causing the company irreparable harm. That request was denied.Lawyers then made headlines when they accused Ticketmaster of destroying evidence in the case — and again, U.S. District Judge Dale Fischer ruled against Songkick, saying there was no proof any evidence was destroyed. In February, Songkick alleges it was hacked by Ticketmaster — it turned out Songkick hadn’t changed any of its passwords after several employees quit. These employees, now under the employ of Ticketmaster, we able to utilize their logins to access parts of the Songkick system.“In every case, Songkick comes out swinging with these allegations, the press picks it up and then no one ever follows through,” our source says. “Each allegation turns out to be a nothing-burger, but by the end no one cares.”On top of it, Songkick has spent thousands on expensive PR firms to bully some in the media, and ex-employees said founder Matt Jones spent big bucks on first class flights to the company’s offices in London, Los Angeles, New York and Nashville. Coupled with pricey SoHo House memberships and tens of millions spent on a lawsuit, it’s not hard to see how the company could burn through money.
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