ZZ TOP Sell "Entire Music Interests" For $50 Million; Includes Publishing Catalogue, Income From Recorded And Performance Royalties
December 21, 2021, 2 years ago
Variety is reporting that BMG and KKR have put their recently announced partnership to work, acquiring the “entire music interests” of long-running American rock band ZZ Top for a sum sources place at around $50 million.
The agreement includes a buyout of the band’s publishing catalogue and their income from recorded royalties and performance royalties. Previously, BMG served as co-publisher and administrator of ZZ Top’s publishing catalog.
The band - Billy Gibbons (guitar, vocals), Frank Beard (drums) and the late Dusty Hill (bass, keyboards, vocals) - released their debut album in 1971 and released 14 more over the course of their 50-year career, including Fandango (featuring their first hit single “Tush”) and the video-powered albums that made them one of the biggest rock acts of the ‘80s, Eliminator and Afterburner. The band has sold more than 50 million albums worldwide and has earned four gold, three platinum and three multi-platinum albums; in 2004, they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
The group went more than 50 years without a lineup change until bassist Dusty Hill died in July at the age of 72. He was replaced for live dates by longtime guitar tech Elwood Francis.
While the two companies announced in March that they would partner up for music IP, they have largely worked separately in the months since, with BMG acquiring catalogs from Tina Turner and Motley Crue, while KKR’s Chord Music acquired a catalog from Kobalt for around $1.1 billion.
Read more at Variety.
(Photo - Ross Halfin)