Merlin Network
Merlin is a digital rights music licensing partner for independent record labels, distributors, and other music rights holders around the world. It was founded in 2007 with Charles Caldas as the chief executive. In January 2020, Jeremy Sirota stepped into the role of Merlin CEO.[2] The company is a member-based organization representing the digital licensing rights for hundreds of independent labels and distributors in nearly every country around the globe. As of 2019, Merlin has paid out over two billion dollars.[3][4]
Company type
Non-profit
Merlin Network
Music distribution
2007
London[1]
Worldwide
- Darius Van Arman, Chairperson
- Jeremy Sirota, Chief Executive
Digital music licensing
- Altafonte
- Armada Music
- Because Music/London Music Stream
- Beggars Group
- Curb Records
- Domino Recording Company
- Eleven Seven Music
- Entertainment One Music
- Epitaph Records
- Hopeless Records
- Hospital Records
- !K7
- Mad Decent
- Merge Records
- Naxos Records
- Ninja Tune
- PIAS Group
- Red Bull Records
- Redeye Distribution
- Secretly Group
- Symphonic Distribution
- Ultra Music
- WARP Records
History[edit]
Merlin was launched in early 2007 at the Marché International du Disque et de l'Edition Musicale in Cannes. The company was founded by Alison Wenham (WIN), Michel Lambot [PIAS], Tom Silverman (Tommy Boy) and Martin Mills (Beggars Group);[5] Charles Caldas was the first chief executive.[6] The organization's first commercial deal was a 2008 license with Spotify as one of the then-regional streaming service's original licensing partners.
The company has negotiated settlements for copyright infringement with distributors such as Grooveshark, Limewire and XM Satellite Radio. Its content has been distributed through TikTok, Facebook/Instagram, Deezer, Pandora Music, SoundCloud, Spotify, Vevo, YouTube Premium and other services.[7]
In February 2013, Merlin and IMPALA signed an agreement with Warner Music Group after it acquired Parlophone, to transfer 30% of that label's value to Merlin and IMPALA members. The divestment ended with the transfer of rights to the independent sector.[8]
In 2016, Merlin opened an office in Tokyo, Japan, to expand its global operations.[9]
In March 2018 the company entered into agreements with the three Chinese streaming services – NetEase, Alibaba, and Tencent – for digital music distribution in China. In May 2018, the company sold all of its Spotify shares for an estimated $125 million-plus, passing the proceeds on to its members.[10] A landmark global licensing deal in December 2019 saw Merlin partnering with Boomplay Music.[11]
In 2020, Jeremy Sirota joined Merlin as its second CEO. The organization expanded its deals to include Apple, Snap, and Triller.[12][13]
In January 2021, Merlin held a "Celebrate Music" event. At the event, it unveiled a new brand, a new logo, and an updated website.[14]
In August 2021, Feed Media Group, the B2B music licensing subscription service, signed a music licensing deal with Merlin, for its Adaptr product. Adaptr is a subscription-based platform. The deal provides access to a catalog of licensed music from Merlin member labels, distributors, and their artists.[15]
In September 2021, Merlin and South Asian music and audio streaming service JioSaavn announced that they had extended and enhanced an existing music licensing partnership. The expanded partnership enabled Merlin’s membership to increase their presence in South Asia and expanded JioSaavn’s catalog offering to its worldwide audience.[16]
Merlin added to its list of partners in October 2021 when it announced a deal with TREBEL, the maker of a licensed music app with on-demand and offline play sponsored by brand advertisers.[17] The company ended the year by announcing an expanded licensing agreement with African music streaming service Boomplay.[18]
In January 2022, Merlin partnered with UK-based Lickd to allow creators to legally use Merlin members' music in their YouTube videos.[19]
Next, in early February 2022, Merlin announced a partnership with Twitch, the interactive live streaming service for content spanning gaming, entertainment, sports, music, and more. [20]
April 2022 saw the company announce a deal with FLO, a leading streaming application in Korea. [21]
In October 2022, Pinterest announced a deal to bring Merlin members' musical repertoire to its platform. [22] That month also saw a partnership announced with China-based short-form video platform Kuaishou.[23]
Merlin announced two new partnerships in December of 2022: first with VR fitness app Supernatural[24] and then with STYNGR, a gaming music platform.[25]
In May 2023, Merlin unveiled a global licensing deal with Soundcloud.[26] In late June, the company announced a partnership with all-in-one visual communication platform Canva to grant Canva customers in many countries access to use music clips in their designs. [27]
March 2024 saw a renewed partnership with Deezer. [28] The following month, Merlin announced a partnership with Audiomack.