Wednesday, March 10, 2021
Fast Company picked out 10 music companies that have “elevated the music industry” and are expected to have an impact long after COVID-19 pandemic ends. Tainy’s Neon16, Royalty Exchange and Beyoncé’s Parkwood made the list.
The top 10, along with the reasoning behind their selection.
- NEON16. For empowering urban Latin culture across entertainment via a talent incubator and music label run in partnership with Interscope Records.
- VERZUZ. Everyone wins on Timbaland and Swizz Beatz’s battle platform that drives streaming numbers and renews interest for older artists.
- PARKWOOD ENTERTAINMENT. Beyoncé’s management and entertainment company has elevated Black culture via film, fashion, and new artists.
- BEATSTARS. The online marketplace for producers to sell their beats to artists has grown to more than 2m users receiving more than $100m in payouts.
- HARMONIX MUSIC SYSTEMS. The makers of Guitar Hero and Rockband return with Fuser where players remix up to four tracks at a time.
- BANDCAMP. The music e-tailer put musicians first by waiving fees one Friday every month and the introduction of a ticketed live streaming service.
- DOLBY. During the pandemic, the audio company introduced tools to improving the sound quality of livestreams and recordings.
- ROYALTY EXCHANGE. Via eXchange, Royalty Exchange created a Craigslist style marketplace for the sale of royalties.
- AUDIOMACK. The streaming platform opened its first international office in Lagos in 2020, and signed a licensing deal with Warner Music making the label’s catalog available across Africa, Jamaica and Canada for the first time. Audiomack will also support Warner Music’s A&R department with data insights.
- STEM. The music distribution platform introduced Scale to provide cash upfront to artists in exchange for a fixed percentage of future earnings until the advance is paid off. Stem has a bankroll of $100m and has handed out $1.6m since the pandemic began.