"Having big artists means a lot of the opportunities are incoming, and although that is wonderful, what really drives me is moving things and opening doors for the up and comers."
The group may not perform again with its full-seven member lineup until 2025 — putting a lot of weight on solo projects and new bands like Seventeen and NewJeans.
The longtime industry player founded the New York retail chain Musical Maze in the 1970s before going on to launch the distribution companies Impact and Big Daddy.
Kevin Brophy says the cover of Cardi's debut mixtape left him "devastated." Her lawyers say he's trying to "cash in the legal equivalent of a lotto ticket.”
The deal includes the band's iconic hit "Drive."
The increasingly isolated rapper -- banned from Twitter and Instagram, and under fire for a wave of antisemitic comments -- wants a social platform of his own.
Brian Tarney and Liz Garo from Spaceland Presents hope to find their groove with the new company, which is also producing a forthcoming New York music event called Flesh & Steel.
Companies like Spotify and Deezer are ramping up their efforts to hook their users on products with better margins, from the spoken word to a wellness app.
The broadcaster says it ousted Lauter after an investigation, but a lawyer for the iHeart employee who filmed the videos says they represent a "hostile work environment" at the company's offices.
Allowing a lawsuit over "basic musical building blocks" to move forward toward trial will hurt future songwriters, Sheeran's attorneys argue.