Kobalt Music Group
Kobalt Music Group is an independent rights management and publishing company. Founded in 2000 by CEO Willard Ahdritz, Kobalt acts primarily as an administrative publishing company, not owning any copyrights. Also offering label services and neighboring rights, the company has developed an online portal to provide royalty income and activity to artists and allow them to manage their rights and royalties directly.
Wired reported in 2015 that Kobalt was "the top independent music publisher in the UK and the second overall in the US," with around 600,000 songs and 8,000 artists in its catalogue, including Massive Attack, Trent Reznor, Gwen Stefani, Phoenix, Prince, Sonic Youth, Ellie Goulding, Paul McCartney, Bob Marley, John Denver, Tiesto, Bob Dylan, and Kelly Clarkson.
Kobalt owned 17.3% of the top 100 radio songs in the US in of 2015, ranking it third after Universal. With headquarters in New York, Kobalt also has offices in cities such as London, Los Angeles, Nashville, Atlanta, Berlin, Stockholm, Miami, Hong Kong, and Sydney. Kobalt paid $29.8 million for the acquisition of Fintage House's Music Companies.
History
Founding and early years (2000–11)
Kobalt Music Group was founded in 2000 in New York City, with founder Willard Ahdritz, a native of Sweden, taking on the role of CEO. Together with Klas Lunding Ahdritz had previously launched Telegram Publishing in Stockholm in 1988. Kobalt's initial business model focused on collecting and distributing royalties for artists, with the stated goal of ensuring artists were paid appropriately and promptly. In 2005 the company debuted its Kobalt Label Services Portal, an online portal for artists to track and manage their own portfolios.Kobalt Music Group won Independent Music Publisher of the Year at the 2009 Music Week Awards, winning the following year as well. Kobalt added a neighboring rights division in 2011. In December 2011, Kobalt bought Artists Without a Label, a digital distribution and label services company. Kobalt as a result gained access to AWAL's network of digital retail partners, which among other companies included iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, eMusic, Rhapsody, 7Digital, Beatport, Deezer, and Nokia. The acquisition also allowed Kobalt to begin supplying advanced data analytics to clients.
Expansion and new services (2012–14)
After the AWAL acquisition, Kobalt formed the label services division Kobalt Label Services in 2012. In July 2012, Kobalt Music Group signed a deal with MPL Communications to exclusively provide administrative services to MPL in "the world outside North America, the U.K. and Ireland." The catalog included 1,200 songwriters such as Hugh Masekela and Paul McCartney, with classic songs such as "Baby It's Cold Outside" and "Luck Be A Lady." Prince signed a deal in May 2013 to market and distribute his work with Kobalt, with his rights over his masters left intact.Recent developments (2014–present)
In 2014 Kobalt purchased the American Mechanical Rights Agency, a collection agency. Kobalt announced that it was preparing to expand into the Latin American market in April 2014, and that June the company raised US$140 million in funding to "accelerate rapid growth" and that year Kobalt also raised US$66 million from investors such as MSD Capital.In February 2015, Google Ventures in London made Kobalt its inaugural investment, with Google Ventures' president explaining that Kobalt was "changing the way artists are treated in the music business, particularly when it comes to providing trust and transparency and compensating creators for their work." Google Ventures raised US$60 million for the company in a Series C round of financing, which Kobalt announced would largely be used to develop their technology and open new offices in Miami, Brazil, and South East Asia. This brought the total of equity raised by Kobalt to $126 million. At that point, Kobalt had also invested $100 million of the initial $153 million it had raised to "help finance a second strand of its business – label services where Kobalt either buys part or all of an artists' rights to help collect royalties on their behalf."
Wired reported in May 2015 that Kobalt was "the top independent music publisher in the UK and the second overall in the US," with around 8,000 artists and 600,000 songs in their catalogue. At the time, Kobalt continued to collect royalty money directly from services such as Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, and various collection agencies.
In December 2017, Kobalt acquired SONGS for an estimated $150 million.
With headquarters in London, Kobalt currently has offices in cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Nashville, Atlanta, Berlin, Stockholm, Miami, Hong Kong, and Sydney.
Technology
Kobalt has developed a number of technologies to increase its own efficiency at tracking and collecting royalties. In 2005 the company debuted its Kobalt Portal, an online portal for artists to track and manage their own portfolios. In 2014, Kobalt introduced ProKlaim, a YouTube integration that by 2014 had significantly increased artist revenue on the platform. ProKlaim serves as an "advanced detection platform" by integrating with YouTube's own music detection technology. As of 2015, Kobalt had started describing their backend technology as "KORE." KORE manages rights, and tracks, collects and pay royalties across disparate markets, with the collected data accessible through the Kobalt Portal.Divisions
Division | Formed | Description |
Kobalt Music Publishing | 2001 | Kobalt Music Publishing is an independent, private music publisher that also provides creative services to artists. Explains The Telegraph, "the company aims to offer its clients a 'transparent' fee model, using sophisticated algorithms to monitor and collect music royalties from all areas of digital output, and breaking down these earnings for artists." As of February 2015, Kobalt owned 17.3% of the total market share among Hot 100 music publishers, ranking it second in the US after Universal. |
Kobalt Neighboring Rights | 2011 | Formed in 2011, Kobalt Neighboring Rights claims neighbouring rights royalties owed from collection societies on behalf of all KNR clients, navigating the royalties laws of separate countries. This division oversees the Kobalt Portal, which allows artists to access their financial data in real time. |
Kobalt Label Services | 2012 | Introduced in January 2012, Kobalt Label Services was founded when Kobalt acquired digital distributor AWAL. Kobalt Label Services provides record label services to artists, receiving a share of revenues, while artists retain ownership of their master rights. According to The Independent, the division allows artists to "maintain ownership of their work and control over when, how and where they will release their music." |
Current catalogue
Kobalt currently has licensing deals with around 8,000 artists and 600 publishing companies, representing a catalogue that totals around 600,000 songs.Selected publishers
The following publishers are currently signed to Kobalt Music Group:- B-Unique Music
- Big Life Music
- Blue Mountain Music
- Cherry Tree
- Communion Defend Music
- Disney Music Group
- Getty Images
- Hipgnosis Songs Fund
- Inside Assage
- Lateral
- Little Louder
- MPCA
- MPL Communications
- National Geographic
- Nettwerk
- OWSLA
- Polar Patrol Publishing
- San Remo
- Secretly Canadian
- Songs Music Publishing
- Soul Kitchen Music
- Ten
- Third and Verse
Selected artists
- 50 Cent
- Gregg Allman
- Alt-J
- Iain Archer
- The B-52's
- Band of Skulls
- Geoff Barrow
- Dave Bassett
- Beck
- Big & Rich
- Black Submarine
- Blonde Redhead
- Bon Iver
- Bon Jovi
- Jake Bugg
- Busta Rhymes
- The Cardigans
- Guy Chambers
- Cirkut
- Kelly Clarkson
- Cerebral Ballzy
- Charli XCX
- Cut Copy
- Miles Davis
- John Denver
- Dr. Luke
- Todd Howard
- Eminem
- Ella Eyre
- Family of the Year
- The Family Rain
- Neil Finn
- Keith Flint
- Flume
- Foo Fighters
- Childish Gambino
- Art Garfunkel
- Gary Go
- Gotye
- Dave Grohl
- David Guetta
- Albert Hammond Jr.
- The Head and the Heart
- The Hives
- Holy Ghost
- Enrique Iglesias
- Jack Garratt
- Jimmy Eat World
- Joss Stone
- Kid Cudi
- Kid Rock
- Killswitch Engage
- Kygo
- Lady Antebellum
- Adam Lambert
- Cyndi Lauper
- LCD Soundsystem
- Trip Lee
- Jamie Liddell
- Lil' C
- Little Boots
- Little Dragon
- LMFAO
- Local Natives
- Courtney Love
- The Lumineers
- Bob Marley
- Max Martin
- Shane McAnally
- Paul McCartney
- Brian McKnight
- Moby
- Mogwai
- mxmtoon
- Stevie Nicks
- Rudy Nicoletti
- Gary Numan
- William Orbit
- Panic! at the Disco
- Peaches
- Shelly Peiken
- Pet Shop Boys
- Phoenix
- Ariel Pink
- Poliça
- The presidents of the United States of America
- Elvis Presley
- Kelly Price
- Queens of the Stone Age
- Rammstein
- Ariel Rechtshaid
- Trent Reznor
- Lionel Richie
- Lindy Robbins
- Dan Romer
- Roxette
- Prince Royce
- Rudimental
- Noah "40" Shebib
- Shellback
- Skrillex
- Sonic Youth
- Matt Squire
- Gwen Stefani
- Billy Steinberg
- Shane Stevens
- Rod Stewart
- Serj Tankian
- Tears for Fears
- Ryan Tedder
- Tiësto
- TV on the Radio
- Rufus Wainwright
- Wavves
- Eg White
- Dan Wilson
- Steve Winwood
- Yeasayer
- Noel Zancanella
- Akon
- James Bay
- Björk
- Aloe Blacc
- Jake Bugg
- Charli XCX
- Taio Cruz
- Duran Duran
- Bob Dylan
- Foxes
- Jess Glynne
- Gotye
- Ellie Goulding
- Ariana Grande
- Calvin Harris
- Felix Jaehn
- Carly Rae Jepsen
- Cher Lloyd
- Kygo
- Macklemore and Ryan Lewis
- Bruno Mars
- John Newman
- Nico and Vinz
- OMI
- Pitbull
- Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Simon and Garfunkel
- Sam Smith
- Tame Impala
- Thirty Seconds to Mars
- Tove Lo
- Jessie Ware
- Zedd
- Band of Horses
- Courtney Barnett
- Big and Rich
- Boy George
- Julian Casablancas
- Chrysalis Records
- Culture Club
- The Darkness
- De La Soul
- deadmau5
- Die Antwoord
- Neil Finn
- Good Charlotte
- David Gray
- Macy Gray
- Billy Idol
- Karen O
- The Kooks
- Lifehouse
- Little Simz
- Laura Marling
- Massive Attack
- Martina McBride
- New Kids on the Block
- Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
- Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds
- Pet Shop Boys
- Peter Bjorn and John
- Placebo
- Steel Panther
- Joss Stone
- Todd Terje
- Travis
- The Waterboys
Awards and nominations
- 2009: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2010: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2011: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2012: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2013: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2014: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2015: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2016: Music Week Awards – Independent Music Publisher of the Year
- 2017: Music Week Awards – Publisher of the Year