Filed under: Deals, Press releases, Starbucks (SBUX), Media World
Independent record label Concord Music Group and Australian-based film company Village Roadshow Photos Group, part of the media company Village Roadshow Ltd. (OTC: VRLDY), have merged to form Village Roadshow Entertainment Group, reported Billboard early last week. Village Roadshow will own almost 40% of the new company, while the other majority split between two private equity firms based in New York and Los Angeles. According to Billboard, the two companies “had common owners in that Norman Lear and Hal Gaba’s Act III Communications and Tailwind owned Concord; and Act III and Clarity — through an entity called Crescent Entertainment — owned 50% of Village Roadshow Pictures group.”
The deal is nearly six months old, after being announced on September 3, 2007, and the Act III group paid close to $48 million to command more than 60% of the new company. Both companies will continue to operate as “separate entities, but some backroom functions like human resources and information technology likely will be combined.” Additionally, the report indicated that some cross-promotion opportunities are to be expected via the merger of film and music companies.
While this deal and the merger seem logical for the owners and participants involved, the only concern this consumer has about a private equity firm owning a majority stake in a music company is the problems that have plagued London-based EMI since Terra Firma purchased out the music giant last summer. Clearly, Concord has enjoyed a positive relationship with its private equity owners for longer and with much more success. Furthermore, the label has gained significant signings in the last year while creating a new label with Starbucks Corp. (NASDAQ: SBUX) to release Paul McCartney’s first album after leaving EMI last spring (before the Terra Firma buyout).











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