Tuesday, December 22, 2020
THREE PLAYERS PUNCHING ABOVE THEIR WEIGHT: John Janick’s
Interscope (10.2) wasn’t just the marketshare monster of 2020—the company defied the odds under unprecedented and truly awful circumstances and positively triumphed with a diverse slate of huge records.
In addition to homegrown giants like
Billie Eilish, who kicked things off with a Grammy sweep, and
Lady Gaga, the company cultivated big hits from
LVRN (
Summer Walker),
SCMG (
DaBaby),
Alamo (
Rod Wave) and other JVs. Janick's stellar A&R team includes
Sam Riback,
Nicole Wyskoarko and
Tim Glover.
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Meanwhile, what’s next for
Joie Manda? One of the hottest A&R execs in the new ecosystem dominated by Black music is exiting the company, with his next move TBA. It came as a major shock, given the tremendous success he shared with Janick and their close, familial relationship. The best guess is that there’s an entrepreneurial play here, and a new label with a distribution deal as the money and the majors line up. This will be one of 2021’s evolving stories.
Republic (7.9) also fared exceptionally well during lockdown, with chart-dominating sets from
Taylor Swift (times two),
The Weeknd,
Pop Smoke,
Ariana Grande,
Post Malone et al. The House of
Lipman will kick things up another notch—and likely rise in the marketshare standings—in the new year, with
Morgan Wallen and
Drake joining their slate of chart perennials. A&R hitters include
Wendy Goldstein,
Sammie Taylor,
Ben Adelson,
Steve Carless,
Tyler Arnold and the
Swirsky.
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2020 was also an extraordinary year for
Ron Perry’s
Columbia (7.0), which fired one giant after another up the DSP and radio charts, including
Harry Styles, K-Pop megastars
BTS and breakouts like
24k Goldn,
Jawsh 685,
The Kid LAROI,
Polo G,
Staysolidrocky,
Powfu and
Ritt Momney. Perry, in particular, seemed to have unlocked the arcane formula of locating
TikTok bangers and porting them to the mainstream. On Perry’s A&R crew:
Imran Majid,
Justin Eshak and
Shawn Holiday.
THE TREE ON THE TOWER: With the
Barnett era now one for the books, the
Jeff Vaughn era begins at
Capitol Music Group (7.6). How will the new boss fare in overseeing the complex interlocking machinery that has been key to CMG’s success? How will Vaughn’s A&R expertise factor into the new order? How will
Michelle Jubelirer,
Elliot Grainge,
Ethiopia Habtemariam and
Jacqueline Saturn figure in the evolving structure? What shoes are yet to drop at the Tower?
Is a change in store at the top of another major label? Insiders say we should know more sometime in Q1.
CHRISTMAS BUNNY: At
Aaron Bay-Schuck and
Tom Corson’s
Warner (6.2), Grammy darling Dua Lipa is poised to make the leap to superstardom, having scored big-time with her livestream show and with her
SNL and Grammy looks still to come. The Bunny also has 2020’s biggest holiday album (from perennial
Michael Bublé), and recent signing
CJ is breaking through on the DSPs, radio and TikTok.
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SHARE AND SHARE ALIKE: Peter Edge’s
RCA (4.7%) made a big splash with Best New Artist nom
Doja Cat. His A&R coterie includes, among others,
Keith Naftaly,
Tunji Balogun,
Mark Pitts and
Derrick Aroh.
Future,
Travis Scott/Jackboys and
21 Savage led the way at
Sylvia Rhone’s
Epic (2.7%). Sylvia’s stature as a voice for inclusion and change in the biz, meanwhile, is unparalleled, and her commitment to mentorship is visible in the increasing diversity of the biz (though there is still far too little at the top of the pyramid). When she spoke to these and other issues during the year, it was with the authority of a trailblazer.
Def Jam (2.3%) is showing signs of life under
Jeff Harleston’s leadership, with Album of the Year
Grammy nominee
Jhené Aiko becoming the label’s newest star.
Justin Bieber returned for more big action. Label stalwart
Rich Isaacson, meanwhile, lit the menorah.
Shawn Mendes continued his commercial and artistic growth at
Darcus Beese’s
Island (1.7%). The British label boss continues to advance and extend the
Blackwellian vision of unique signings and potent spliffs.
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