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                            TRIUMPH-OF-CONTENT-L Digest 300


Date: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 11:18:13 -0800 (PST)
From: James Beniger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: <toc>--Courtney Love Seeks to Rock Record Labels' Contract Policy (LAT)



        I take this report on the front page of this morning's Los
        Angeles Times to be the content story of the day.
                                                           -- Jim       

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                     Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times 
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         http://www.latimes.com/business/updates/lat_love010228.htm

 Wednesday, February 28, 2001


        Courtney Love Seeks to Rock Record Labels' Contract Policy

        Music: Suit challenges Universal's royalty practices. 
        Firm says it is fair.

        By CHUCK PHILIPS, Times Staff Writer


 "I could end up being the music industry's worst nightmare: a smart gal
 with a fat bank account who is unafraid to go down in flames fighting for
 a principle. Look, you show a music industry contract to any attorney in
 any other business and their jaw just hits the floor. Somebody has to put
 a stop to this," said Courtney Love, singer-songwriter.

      Just as actress Olivia de Havilland brought down the Hollywood
 studio system in the 1950s and outfielder Curt Flood fought for free
 agency in baseball in the 1970s, rock star Courtney Love is determined to
 radically redefine the nature of the music recording business for the
 next century.

      Love is seeking to break her contract with Vivendi Universal, the
 world's largest record conglomerate, and expose what she calls the
 "unconscionable and unlawful" business tactics of the major record
 labels.

      The case threatens to throw back the curtain on what Love and others
 allege are the industry's corrupt accounting practices, designed to hide
 profits and cheat artists out of royalty payments.

      Vivendi Universal officials declined to speak about the suit but in
 their legal papers dismissed Love's suit as a "meritless, inflammatory
 diatribe" designed to "attract media attention." Universal has sued Love
 seeking damages for five undelivered albums. The company describe the
 contract as a "fair, industry-standard agreement" that she "willingly"
 signed.

      Universal and other labels contend that they invest a lot in
 developing and marketing artists, and that long-term contracts are the
 only means they have of recouping those expenses.

      Should Love prevail in court, the case could rewrite the economics
 of the recorded music industry and lead to a wholesale exodus of
 recording acts from their labels--breaking the major music companies'
 decades-long lock on talent.

      "If Courtney Love prevails, this case will nail the lid shut on the
 coffin of the standard long-term recording contract. It could change the
 business," said attorney Don Engel, who has represented such acts as
 Donna Summer and Don Henley in past contract disputes.

      "It is difficult to challenge a giant music company and go up
 against traditional industry practices, but there is no reason why
 Courtney can't win this case," said attorney Yale Lewis, who successfully
 represented the father of Jimi Hendrix in a case to reclaim the rock
 star's catalog from MCA Records. "If this goes to trial, it will be a
 jury that decides the facts. Not the industry." 


     Long-Term Contracts Are Focus of Lawsuit

     At its core, the suit is about the recording industry's tradition of
 long-term contracts that keep artists tied up for years longer than is
 legal in other industries, including television, film and sports. And it
 seeks to end the practice that allows companies to buy and sell artists'
 contracts, often against their will.

      Officials with the Recording Industry Assn. of America declined to
 be interviewed.

      Love and Universal are to appear in Los Angeles County Superior
 Court today for a status hearing on the suit.

      The singer-songwriter might be the first artist to challenge the
 industry's standard contract who actually has the financial muscle to
 withstand a lengthy court battle.

      Love is not only a successful music star, but she also has
 established a second career as a film actress, starring in "The People
 vs. Larry Flynt" and working with such acclaimed directors as Milos
 Forman and Martin Scorsese. In addition, she controls the estate and
 catalog of her late husband, Nirvana star Kurt Cobain, whose music
 generates millions of dollars annually.

      "I could end up being the music industry's worst nightmare: a smart
 gal with a fat bank account who is unafraid to go down in flames fighting
 for a principle," Love said.

      "Look, you show a music industry contract to any attorney in any
 other business, and their jaw just hits the floor. Somebody has to put a
 stop to this crap," she said. "I've been evangelized. I'm ready to take
 this thing all the way to the Supreme Court."

      Peter Paterno, attorney for such acts as Metallica and Dr. Dre, says
 standard contracts keep artists tied up throughout their career with
 terms that are dictated by the industry.

      "Record labels operate on the premise that because they take such a
 large financial risk and have such a low rate of success that they have
 the right to maximize their return when they do score a hit. So the terms
 are stacked against the artist," Paterno said.

      "As an artist's representative, you wish there was something you
 could do to change that, but you can't. In this market, there are only
 five companies, and they all behave exactly the same."

      Breaking with tradition, Love stepped outside of the industry to
 enlist a legal team to challenge the contract. She fired her former music
 attorney in December after his firm balked at trying the case and
 attempted to convince her to accept a settlement offer.

      Love then hired A. Barry Cappello, a hard-nosed trial lawyer with no
 Hollywood ties who has won massive verdicts against such financial
 monoliths as Bank of America. She also recruited prominent private
 detective Jack Palladino, who helped former Brown & Williamson executive
 Jeffrey Wigand win his battle against the tobacco industry.

      Love is seeking to terminate her contract on a variety of grounds.
 She says she was coerced into signing away all of her rights, including
 ownership of her music, to the company under a boilerplate industry
 agreement. Because every label uses the same contract, Love had no
 choice, the suit says, but to submit to the "oppressive" terms outlined
 in her long-term deal.

      Among the 15 causes of action listed in her suit, Love is
 challenging the legality of her contract's assignment clause, a provision
 that allowed the company that owned her contract to sell it without her
 consent. The suit contends that the recent trend of mega-mergers and
 consolidation has harmed the industry's artists--and rendered their
 contracts invalid.

      As a result of that consolidation, Geffen Records, the label at
 which Love originally signed her agreement, no longer exists. The suit
 says Love and her band, Hole, initially passed up offers from a number of
 competitors to join Geffen, a boutique label launched during the 1980s by
 entertainment impresario David Geffen. The suit says Love signed with
 Geffen in 1992 specifically because the label had success developing the
 careers of rock acts such as Sonic Youth and Nirvana and promised to take
 a similar approach with Hole.

      By the time Love landed at the label, Geffen had already sold his
 company to MCA, which in turn was scooped up by Tokyo-based Matsushita
 Electric Industrial Inc. Shortly after Hole released its first album,
 Matsushita sold MCA to Canadian liquor giant Seagram Co. Seagram then
 devoured Dutch music behemoth PolyGram and folded Geffen into its
 Interscope division. Last year, the liquor giant was gobbled up by
 Vivendi, a French utilities and waste corporation.

      "I've sunk from being marketed by an American label that understood
 how to sell my music to a huge Canadian corporation that knows nothing
 but how to sell booze and finally slid down into the sewers of Paris,"
 Love said. "Why? All because I, like every other recording artist I know,
 had the misfortune of being forced to sign an illegal contract."

      Or, as attorney Engel put it, "The fact is if you're a new artist,
 they just shove the thing down your throat. You have no choice but to
 sign it."

      In her suit, Love contends that she can't work for Vivendi because
 it has a completely different agenda from the rock-oriented boutique
 label to which she committed. Love's music is now marketed and promoted
 by Interscope Records, a hit-driven label whose contract offer she
 rejected in 1992 before signing with Geffen.

      Love's suit is also based in part on California Section 2855, a law
 instituted 50 years ago following a legal battle by film star Olivia de
 Havilland to free actors from long-term studio deals. So far, the law is
 untested in the music business.

      Under the so-called seven-year statute, entertainers cannot be tied
 to any company for more than seven years. To avoid testing the law,
 record companies have usually rewritten the contracts of disgruntled
 stars, offering concessions in exchange for additional albums. Earlier
 possible showdowns over the statute, including cases by Beck, Don Henley
 and Luther Vandross, were averted when industry attorneys convinced the
 artists to settle out of court for multimillion-dollar advances.

      Love rejected a settlement offer after notifying Universal's
 Interscope arm Dec. 19, 1999, that she would no longer record for the
 company.

      Universal responded to the legal challenge by filing a lawsuit
 against Love on Jan. 19, 2000. Universal, which has since been acquired
 by Vivendi, is taking the position that the seven-year statute does not
 apply to recording artists. Sources say Love could owe the conglomerate
 as much as $100 million for undelivered albums.


      Love to Challenge State Law Protecting Labels

      The California Legislature enacted an amendment to the statute in
 1987 at the urging of the major labels, which granted them the right to
 recover damages from any artist who attempts to break his or her
 contract. Love intends to challenge that amendment, alleging in her suit
 that record company lobbyists and executives duped legislators with false
 testimony to get it passed.

      Attorney Engel, who testified against the measure before the
 California Senate, agrees.

      "The record companies testified that they needed this exemption in
 order to make money because they make such a big investment, but that is
 simply not true," Engel said.

      According to her suit, the labels falsely told lawmakers that their
 development costs were so prohibitive that the industry did not begin to
 make money until an artist had been signed for seven years. The labels
 also misled legislators, the suit says, by implying that artists signed
 to standard seven-album deals can deliver one album a year if they
 choose.

      Love's suit maintains that it is impossible for any artist to
 fulfill the terms dictated in the standard recording agreement. The
 reason: Record companies typically insist on a two-year gap between album
 releases. During that period, the company usually embarks on a marketing
 campaign that includes a series of single and video releases plus
 extensive touring by the act. As a result, the standard deal usually
 chains an artist to a label for at least 14 years--the span of most music
 careers.

      However, Universal and other labels contend that without low-paying,
 long-term contracts, they would have no incentive to underwrite the
 enormous costs of developing an unknown artist's career. At the same
 time, they say, they pay fair royalties based on time-honored accounting
 practices.

      Love and her band have sold about 4 million albums in the U.S. since
 1994, generating an estimated $50 million at music retail outlets.
 Universal collected the lion's share of that money, about $40 million in
 wholesale billing. Love says the company paid about $2 million in
 royalties and advances to her and her band--after deducting costs for
 studio recordings, video productions, radio promotions and tour campaigns
 during the course of the contract.

      Love says the primary reason the Big Five record conglomerates have
 been able to call the shots for so long is that they control nearly 90%
 of the music sold throughout the world. They operate the label system
 under which most music is recorded, manufactured, marketed, promoted and
 distributed to radio, MTV and retail outlets.

      The reason artists have no clout, Love says, is the major labels
 work together as an unlawful trust restraining trade and competition.
 That's why, the suit says, labels continue to rake in such huge profits
 on hit CDs while forcing artists to pay for their own recordings, videos,
 retail placement and tour support. It's also why artists are required to
 stay tied to one label their entire career while companies remain free to
 boot bands any time they please, the suit says.

      Because artists have little negotiating leverage, the suit says,
 labels are allowed to deduct exorbitant fees for packaging, product
 breakage and promotional giveaways and to pay lower royalty rates for
 albums sold overseas and on record-club sales. Companies are also able to
 freeze payment of artist royalties to account for returns of unsold
 product, the suit says.

      In the end, Love says artists have no idea how many records they
 actually sell unless they call for an audit--at their own expense. And
 even then, the audit is based solely on financial records provided by the
 company, none of which can be independently verified. In Love's case,
 Universal has repeatedly refused to turn over documents requested by her
 attorneys.

 
         http://www.latimes.com/business/updates/lat_love010228.htm
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                     Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times 
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