Music giant Universal signs deal for Prince vault
The estate of Prince, who long battled the music industry, announced a deal recently with the world’s largest label group Universal to release much of the pop icon’s vast catalog.
Under the deal, Universal gained rights to the fabled vault of unreleased music that Prince kept in his Paisley Park estate in Minnesota where he died in April.
Universal is also taking control of 25 albums that Prince released on his own NPG Records imprint from the mid-1990s, when he wrote “slave” on his cheek and changed his name to the unpronounceable “love symbol” to fight his contract with Warner Brothers.
Universal said, without further detail, that it will obtain rights in the US to “certain renowned Prince albums from 1979 to 1995” — the star’s emblematic era when he topped the charts with “Purple Rain” and other works.
The deal for the early catalog would mark a major blow to Universal’s rival Warner, which had reconciled with Prince in 2014.
Warner had already announced that it will reissue “Purple Rain” accompanied by a full second album worth of unreleased material.
“Prince was one of the greatest musical talents of all time — an incomparable genius as a performer, recording artist and songwriter,” Lucian Grainge, the chairman and chief executive of Universal Music Group, said in a statement which did not disclose the deal’s value.
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