Michael Jackson estate, Sony Music Entertainment strike record distribution deal

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Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'
Music Company Signs $250 Million Album Deal With Jackson Estate

MARCH 15, 2010
Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'
Music Company Signs $250 Million Album Deal With Jackson Estate
By ETHAN SMITH

Months after his death, Michael Jackson set a music-industry record, thanks to a deal between his estate and Sony Corp. valued at as much as $250 million, according to people familiar with the terms.

The deal—touted by both Sony and Mr. Jackson's estate as the most lucrative recording contract ever— guarantees the estate at least $200 million. With 10 albums over seven years, the deal will involve a mix of previously unreleased songs and new packages of familiar ones.

The dollar amount is especially striking against the backdrop of the music industry as a whole, in which U.S. album sales have plunged 52% in a decade. Superstar deals worth tens of millions of dollars per album were rare even at the peak of the CD-sales boom in the late 1990s. Yet it also underscores that the biggest acts are becoming even more essential to record labels, as individual fans purchase fewer albums each year.

Since Mr. Jackson's death on June 25, Sony has sold an estimated 31 million of his albums globally. By the first anniversary of his death, his estate expects to have earned $250 million from sales of music, merchandise and tickets to the posthumous concert film "This Is It."

The advances being paid by Sony are to be offset by sales of albums as well as revenue generated by licensing Mr. Jackson's music for uses like videogames, movies and theatrical performances. But unlike the megadeals struck in recent years by concert promoter Live Nation Entertainment Inc. with pop stars Jay-Z and Madonna, the Jackson deal doesn't give Sony income from other parts of the late singer's business, such as merchandise sales or fees for licensing his name and likeness.

In an interview, Rob Stringer, chairman of Sony Music Entertainment's Columbia/Epic Label Group, said that his company was confident it would more than recoup its hefty investment, which he characterized as more than just a record deal.

"We see it as a partnership," Mr. Stringer said.

The deal should give Mr. Jackson's heirs plenty of breathing room with respect to the crushing debt load he had built up in his final years. With his album sales dwindling and concert touring ground to a halt, Mr. Jackson borrowed heavily to finance his lavish lifestyle

The estate is likely to pay off about $125 million in debt by the end of this year, including $35 million owed to AEG Live, the promoter that was to stage a series of concerts by Mr. Jackson in London. The estate is likely to refinance another $325 million backed by Mr. Jackson's two biggest assets: Sony/ATV Music Publishing, his venture with Sony that owns copyrights to 251 Beatles songs; and his 2,600-acre Neverland Valley Ranch outside Santa Barbara, Calif.

A $300 million loan backed by Sony/ATV and held by Barclays PLC matures at the end of the year, and before Mr. Jackson's death it loomed as a major financial challenge.

In striking the deal, Sony is betting that the appetite for Mr. Jackson's music will prove more than just a spike generated by his unexpected death and the ensuing round-the-clock coverage. A record contract struck in the early 1980s gave Mr. Jackson ownership of his recordings. Sony had the right to distribute those recordings through 2015. The new deal extends that right until 2017, and adds the rights to material recorded since then.

The new deal, like the one from the 1980s, was negotiated by John Branca, Mr. Jackson's long-time lawyer and now an administrator of the estate.

The deal retroactively covers the soundtrack album to "This Is It," plus a range of other releases, some of which have been mapped out, with others to be determined later. An album of previously unreleased songs is likely to hit stores before the end of this year, and another collection is due out later. The deal is also likely to cover expanded reissues of Mr. Jackson's albums "Off the Wall" and "Bad," as well as collections of remixes. A DVD of all of Mr. Jackson's music videos is likely to be created at some point.

Speculation has circulated that Cirque du Soleil would create a Las Vegas show based on Mr. Jackson's music, as it already has done with Beatles' music. If it does, a soundtrack album of some kind would likely be part of the deal.

The estate could probably wipe out the debts entirely by selling its half of Sony/ATV, although such a drastic step is viewed as unlikely now that Mr. Jackson's posthumous business is generating so much cash.

Mr. Jackson acquired ATV for $47.5 million in 1985. Sony in 1995 paid $150 million to become a 50% partner in the venture. Mr. Jackson's half is now valued at at least $1 billion.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704588404575124023860735864.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

ETA:

Head-Spinning Recording Deals

1996: R.E.M. signs $80 million, five-album deal with Warner Music.

2001: EMI inks $100 million, five-album deal with Mariah Carey. In 2002 EMI paid her $28 million to get out of the contract, after just one album.

2002: EMI reaches pact with British pop singer Robbie Williams, said to be valued at as much as $100 million, to get a cut of touring, publishing and merchandising revenue.

2005: Sony Music strikes deal with Bruce Springsteen worth at least $100 million. The costly move contributes to the ouster of then-CEO Andrew Lack.

2007: Live Nation strikes 10-year, $120 million deal to represent Madonna in nearly every aspect of her professional life, including sale of recorded music and licensing of her image.

2008: Live Nation signs $150 million, 10-year deal with Jay-Z. Similar to the contract with Madonna, it gave the company a percentage of future revenue from across his business.

2010: Sony and Michael Jackson's estate agree to a $250 million deal for 10 albums over seven years.

Source: WSJ reporting
 
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Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

good luck to both of them :) Lets hope it works out well
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

Wow, that's big news.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

It's so easy to be a journalist! Just type the pack of lies and misinformation. At least he wrote that Mr. Jackson's half is now valued at least $ 1 billion.

About the alleged agreement, congratulations Sony. You deserve to always have supported Michael (insert irony here).
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

Can we have a DVD/Blu-ray of the Bad tour in that package? Please.


To whom it may concern....

Please keep the negativity out of this thread. All the Sony, Mottola hate-------->this way.

Michael is still making history, and let's not spoil it with the constant babbling about Mottola, Sony etc. ok?
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

I could say alot on this...but I'll leave with They need to give USA & Canada Fans DVD and BlueRay releases of The Movies as well as any other country..It's BS that we've been waiting so long for these..
"A DVD of all of Mr. Jackson's music videos is likely to be created at some point."
All of his short films.. I'll believe it when I see it.Just today I was tallying up a video compilation of Michael's that need to be included Like Blame it on the Boogie Cry Human Nature Say,Say,Say She's Out Of My Life,Another Part of Me (Live) etc. That's something that is only fair. Not to mention All countries wanting The Destiny,Triumph,Victory and Bad tours released..

I'm just saying.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

A less sensational article:

Michael Jackson’s Estate Signs Sweeping Contract

Nine months after Michael Jackson’s death, his estate has signed one of the biggest recording contracts in history, giving Sony, Mr. Jackson’s longtime label, the rights to sell his back catalog and draw on a large vault of unheard recordings.

The deal, for about 10 recordings through 2017, will guarantee the Jackson estate up to $250 million in advances and other payments and offer an especially high royalty rate for sales both inside and outside the United States, according to people with knowledge of the contract who spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to speak about it publicly.

It also allows Sony and the estate to collaborate on a wide range of lucrative licensing arrangements, like the use of Jackson music for films, television and stage shows and lines of memorabilia that will be limited only by the imagination of the estate and the demand of a hungry worldwide market.

“We think that recordings will always be an important part of the estate,” John Branca, an entertainment lawyer who is one of the estate’s executors, said in an interview on Monday. “New generations of kids are discovering Michael.”

“A lot of the people that went to see ‘This Is It’ were families,” he added, referring to the Jackson concert film released in October. “ ‘This Is It’ was one of the few films allowed into China. So we think there are growing and untapped markets for Michael’s music.”

The first recording covered by the new contract is the “This Is It” soundtrack, released last year, and Sony plans a new album of unreleased recordings for November.

Sony’s contract is a bet on the continued appeal of Mr. Jackson, whose sales spiked after his death in June at the age of 50. With overall record sales on a decade-long plunge, mega-deals like this one have become rare, and Mr. Branca said the deal “exceeds all previous industry benchmarks.” Five years ago Bruce Springsteen signed a deal with Sony worth a reported $110 million, and in 2008 Live Nation and Jay-Z struck a $150 million deal for recordings, concert tours and other rights.

Demand for Jackson music has leveled off after the initial rush — in the weeks after his death Sony scrambled to replenish retailers’ stock of any and all Jackson titles — but remains high. Last year Mr. Jackson was the biggest-selling artist in the United States by a wide margin, with 8.3 million combined album sales and 12.4 million downloads of single tracks, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Mr. Branca said that since his death Mr. Jackson has sold more than 31 million albums, about two-thirds of them outside the United States.

But as record sales have tapered off over the last decade, licensing has emerged as the biggest growth area for revenue from recorded music. And given the success of the Beatles and the Elvis Presley estate in reissuing and repackaging old albums as well as finding new uses for their music — like “Love,” the Beatles’ hit theatrical show by Cirque du Soleil — it is not hard to imagine the direction that the Jackson estate might take in using old recordings in new ways.

“It’s not just a record deal,” said Rob Stringer, chairman of the Columbia/Epic Label Group, a Sony division. “We’re not just basing this on how many CDs we sell or how many downloads. There are also audio rights for theater, movies, computer games. I don’t know how an audio soundtrack will be used in 2017, but you’ve got to bet on Michael Jackson in any new platform.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/16/arts/music/16jackson.html
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

Can we have a DVD/Blu-ray of the Bad tour in that package? Please.


To whom it may concern....

Please keep the negativity out of this thread. All the Sony, Mottola hate-------->this way.

Michael is still making history, and let's not spoil it with the constant babbling about Mottola, Sony etc. ok?

DVD, DVD, DVD...

Do you only think about this DVD? Now there's a warning for us not dare to think of something else. "We" do not want to be negative.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

DVD, DVD, DVD...

Do you only think about this DVD? Now there's a warning for us not dare to think of something else. "We" do not want to be negative.

Thanks.

MJ loved breaking records. He would have gotten a kick out of this. Bless him.

Yes, I want the Bad tour on DVD & blu-ray. I wish there was a way of us to bombard the estate with that request.

draw on a large vault of unheard recordings.

Wow...:bugeyed :clapping:

Someone on twitter claimed they will announce the new album tomorrow.
 
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Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

Wow, great news.
10 albums over seven years? Wow.

Hope everything works out with this.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

10 albums in seven years.

This is It was one. Bad and Off the Wall seem to be another (with outtakes?).

Another GH is a CERTAINTY.

That leaves room for 5 albums of worthy releases in 7 years, which is good :D Of course they could release a lot of 'special editions' and two proper releases, but considering how much songs they have to work with, I hope that is not the case!

BTW, OP you can change the title of the thread!!!
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

I'm sorry if I'm posting the news in the wrong place. I just want to help:



AP Source: Jackson in $200M-plus recording deal

By RYAN NAKASHIMA (AP) – 25 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES — The estate of Michael Jackson has landed the late King of Pop the biggest recording deal in history: a $200 million guaranteed contract with Sony Music Entertainment for 10 projects over seven years, according to a person familiar with the deal.

The record-breaking contract could be worth up to $250 million if certain conditions are met. One of the albums will be of never-before-released Jackson recordings that will come out in November, the person said.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the official announcement is expected Tuesday.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



Reuters is unreliable, but here it is:



NEW YORK, March 15 (Reuters) - Sony Corp (6758.T) has reached a deal with Michael Jackson's estate that could be worth as much as $250 million, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the situation.

Stocks | Cyclical Consumer Goods

The report said the deal, coming months after Jackson's death, is the most lucrative recording contract ever signed. It guarantees the estate at least $200 million, according to the newspaper's web site, and involves 10 albums over seven years.

The deal will combine a mix of previously unreleased songs and new packages of familiar ones, according to the report.

Sony has sold about 31 million of Jackson's albums worldwide since his death on June 25, the report said. It added that the advances Sony will pay are to be offset by sales of albums as well as revenue generated by licensing Jackson's music.

Sony's deal with the estate retroactively covers the soundtrack album to "This Is It." It also covers a number of other releases, some of which have been planned and others that still must be determined, according to the Wall Street Journal.

One album of previously unreleased songs is likely to hit stores before the end of this year, and another collection is due out later, it said.

(Reporting by Paul Thomasch)
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

hope this is true.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

The deal retroactively covers the soundtrack album to "This Is It," plus a range of other releases, some of which have been mapped out, with others to be determined later. An album of previously unreleased songs is likely to hit stores before the end of this year, and another collection is due out later. The deal is also likely to cover expanded reissues of Mr. Jackson's albums "Off the Wall" and "Bad," as well as collections of remixes.

Now, finally, we collectors will have legitimate CD releases of MJ's most coveted bootlegs starting this year. I would expect to see the first batch of these unreleased songs to be available for the coming holiday season.

The long rumored 30th Anniversary Edition of OTW is now virtually guaranteed and subsequent 30th anniv's editions of all of MJ works at CBS. The possibilities with MJ's vault of unreleased songs now seem endless and truly exciting. Bravo to Sony Music and Mr. Branca.

Marty In LA
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

Good news about new music.

Still I don't know..since Michael's demonstration against Sony and the whole Killer Thriller speech etc. that he made against them... well, I'm uncomfortable. Also I hope the estate does not sell them Michael's half of the catalogue.
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-michael-jackson16-2010mar16,0,7082645.story

latimes.com

Michael Jackson estate, Sony Music Entertainment strike distribution deal

The contract includes unreleased recordings, DVDs, video games and theater. It could be worth $250 million.

By Chris Lee

March 16, 2010


Administrators of Michael Jackson's estate and his longtime record label, Sony Music Entertainment, Monday announced a seven-year distribution deal for as many as 10 new Jackson projects, including unreleased recordings, DVDs and perhaps even video games, valued at as much as $250 million.

"We and Sony feel that the future for Michael Jackson is unlimited," said John Branca, a special administrator for the estate.

Rob Stringer, chairman of the Columbia Epic label group, a division of Sony, described the deal as a landmark for the recording industry. "The audio rights span across different projects," Stringer said. "There may be theater. There may be films and movies. There may be computer games -- or multimedia platforms that I don't know about today that will happen in 2015."

Jackson died in Los Angeles on June 25, 2009 of acute intoxication from the powerful anesthetic propofol as he was preparing for a series of comeback concerts in London.

Monday's deal eclipses such agreements as Bruce Springsteen's $110-million, seven-album deal with Columbia Records signed in 2005 and British pop crooner Robbie Williams' $150-million, five-album deal with EMI in 2002.

Although Sony enters into the new agreement at a time of plummeting album sales and widespread music industry contraction, sales of so-called "legacy acts" and Jackson's in particular, suggest the potential upside of the agreement. In the nine months since Jackson's death, more than 31 million of his albums have been sold worldwide (with two-thirds occurring overseas), according to a source with knowledge of Jackson's financial dealings who insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. Those sales and various recent licensing deals have brought in close to $250 million to the estate -- easing a substantial portion of the nearly half-billion dollars in debt Jackson owed to financial institutions at the time of his death. The Elvis Presley's estate takes in between $50 million and $60 million annually through music sales and licensing deals. Jimi Hendrix's posthumously released album "Valleys of Neptune" may sell 100,000 copies in its first week of release according to Billboard magazine.

And in addition to several recent re-releases and repackaging of the singer's CDs and movies, Frank Sinatra's estate signed a deal with Warner Music Group in 2008 to explore projects including a restaurant chain, an Old Blue Eyes-themed casino and the use of Sinatra's image to market luxury goods.

The Beatles continue to thrive in the marketplace four decades after their breakup and despite the deaths of two members, John Lennon and George Harrison. More than 60 million Beatles albums have been sold domestically since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking retail sales in 1991.

"If you look at Elvis and the Beatles, and how their brands are thriving, they only hint at what the future holds for Michael," Branca said.

Sony and the Jackson estate already have plans in place for a reissue of Jackson's multi-platinum selling 1979 album "Off the Wall" next year, that will contain a trove of new, exclusive material.

"The stuff we have in the vaults around that record is fascinating and remarkable," Stringer said. "We're going to build a whole platform with a documentary. The outtakes are fantastic! We have a lot of great stuff from around every time period [in Jackson's career]. We're plowing through everything now to understand what we've got."

As well, Jackson estate co-executor John McClain -- a 40-year confidant of the entertainer who produced part of Jackson's 2001 album "Invincible" -- is spearheading the selection of an album of previously unreleased material that could hit shelves late this year.

"John McClain tells me they've got over 60 unreleased recordings that they're choosing from," Branca said. "The first album will have around 10. There's some very recent stuff and vintage stuff that deserves to be shared with Michael's fans."

chris.lee@latimes.com

Times staff writer Randy Lewis contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

I haven't been this excited since I skipped school to go get the Dangerous Album.

Off the wall is in my top 2 favourite MJ albums (Bad is 1st)...and I just cannot believe we will get the outtakes from OTW. OMW!!!!


ETA:

Still I don't know..since Michael's demonstration against Sony and the whole Killer Thriller speech etc. that he made against them... well, I'm uncomfortable. Also I hope the estate does not sell them Michael's half of the catalogue.

Not sure what you are making reference to, but didn't MJ work with Sony on Thriller 25 after the whole Mottola episode? And was working with them on the OTW 30th?

No where do they mention selling Sony/ATV....I think the WSJ actually said the contrary.
 
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Like it or not this is exactly what is needed for Michaels legacy, sony may only be about the money but this means they have decided to put preference on Michaels music and will be doing their best to market it.
 
I think you are going to see Michael everywhere!! on everything and his legacy will far surpass even Elvis, Sinattra etc etc!!

Think Sony have to promote all this well, After all the estate is watching now and THE WORLD!!

Terry
 
Not sure what you are making reference to, but didn't MJ work with Sony on Thriller 25 after the whole Mottola episode? And was working with them on the OTW 30th?

No where do they mention selling Sony/ATV....I think the WSJ actually said the contrary.

If he did guess had to. You mean you don't know what I'm making referece to with 'Killer Thriller'?

This -

[youtube]aW1T1DZdWrA[/youtube]

I know they didn't say they were selling the Sony/ATV the article said this - ''The estate could probably wipe out the debts entirely by selling its half of Sony/ATV, although such a drastic step is viewed as unlikely now that Mr. Jackson's posthumous business is generating so much cash.'' I'm saying yes I hope they don't.

Anyway, I don't want to bring the excitement down. It is nice we get new stuff, and its needed for his legacy, for the new generations. Just don't know how to feel about Sony after what Michael did and said...like he wanted to be free from them after he honored his commitment.

Damnn I wish Michael was still here :(
 
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OMG!

They're finally giving the fans access to the hidden MJ vaults...

I'm so excited....

Man, I need to find a part time job!!! :lol: I have a feeling, I'll be buying a lot of MJ in the upcoming years.

But it's so bittersweet.... Mike... :(
 
Re: Sony Places Big Bet on a Fallen 'King'

A less sensational article:

Michael Jackson’s Estate Signs Sweeping Contract

Nine months after Michael Jackson’s death, his estate has signed one of the biggest recording contracts in history, giving Sony, Mr. Jackson’s longtime label, the rights to sell his back catalog and draw on a large vault of unheard recordings.

The deal, for about 10 recordings through 2017, will guarantee the Jackson estate up to $250 million in advances and other payments and offer an especially high royalty rate for sales both inside and outside the United States, according to people with knowledge of the contract who spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to speak about it publicly.

It also allows Sony and the estate to collaborate on a wide range of lucrative licensing arrangements, like the use of Jackson music for films, television and stage shows and lines of memorabilia that will be limited only by the imagination of the estate and the demand of a hungry worldwide market.

“We think that recordings will always be an important part of the estate,” John Branca, an entertainment lawyer who is one of the estate’s executors, said in an interview on Monday. “New generations of kids are discovering Michael.”

“A lot of the people that went to see ‘This Is It’ were families,” he added, referring to the Jackson concert film released in October. “ ‘This Is It’ was one of the few films allowed into China. So we think there are growing and untapped markets for Michael’s music.”

The first recording covered by the new contract is the “This Is It” soundtrack, released last year, and Sony plans a new album of unreleased recordings for November.

Sony’s contract is a bet on the continued appeal of Mr. Jackson, whose sales spiked after his death in June at the age of 50. With overall record sales on a decade-long plunge, mega-deals like this one have become rare, and Mr. Branca said the deal “exceeds all previous industry benchmarks.” Five years ago Bruce Springsteen signed a deal with Sony worth a reported $110 million, and in 2008 Live Nation and Jay-Z struck a $150 million deal for recordings, concert tours and other rights.

Demand for Jackson music has leveled off after the initial rush — in the weeks after his death Sony scrambled to replenish retailers’ stock of any and all Jackson titles — but remains high. Last year Mr. Jackson was the biggest-selling artist in the United States by a wide margin, with 8.3 million combined album sales and 12.4 million downloads of single tracks, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Mr. Branca said that since his death Mr. Jackson has sold more than 31 million albums, about two-thirds of them outside the United States.

But as record sales have tapered off over the last decade, licensing has emerged as the biggest growth area for revenue from recorded music. And given the success of the Beatles and the Elvis Presley estate in reissuing and repackaging old albums as well as finding new uses for their music — like “Love,” the Beatles’ hit theatrical show by Cirque du Soleil — it is not hard to imagine the direction that the Jackson estate might take in using old recordings in new ways.

“It’s not just a record deal,” said Rob Stringer, chairman of the Columbia/Epic Label Group, a Sony division. “We’re not just basing this on how many CDs we sell or how many downloads. There are also audio rights for theater, movies, computer games. I don’t know how an audio soundtrack will be used in 2017, but you’ve got to bet on Michael Jackson in any new platform.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/16/arts/music/16jackson.html

thanks. that's a lot less sensational.

the part about material recorded, doesn't jibe with the unknown first reporter's saying that newly written material will be included in the deal. it just looks like another previously unreleased type deal. and thanks for the vid. it's always nice to hear the only truth that ever comes out about MIchael's own history. the words that come from his own mouth.
 
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If he did guess had to. You mean you don't know what I'm making referece to with 'Killer Thriller'?

This -



I know they didn't say they were selling the Sony/ATV the article said this - ''The estate could probably wipe out the debts entirely by selling its half of Sony/ATV, although such a drastic step is viewed as unlikely now that Mr. Jackson's posthumous business is generating so much cash.'' I'm saying yes I hope they don't.

Anyway, I don't want to bring the excitement down. It is nice we get new stuff, and its needed for his legacy, for the new generations. Just don't know how to feel about Sony after what Michael did and said...like he wanted to be free from them after he honored his commitment.

Damnn I wish Michael was still here :(

I don't think even the most negative statement can bring real MJ fans down. His legacy will continue as long as the earth keeps turning.

Re: Killer thriller

I know what you meant, but I did not understand what it had to do with the current news.

To me it seems like a rehash of an old dispute, but whatever float your boat.
 
Great news!! I am all excited and looking forward to all of it.
 
Sony and the Jackson estate already have plans in place for a reissue of Jackson's multi-platinum selling 1979 album "Off the Wall" next year, that will contain a trove of new, exclusive material.

"The stuff we have in the vaults around that record is fascinating and remarkable," Stringer said. "We're going to build a whole platform with a documentary. The outtakes are fantastic! We have a lot of great stuff from around every time period [in Jackson's career]. We're plowing through everything now to understand what we've got."

So, looks like we will have a DVD with a documentry. Hope they add some triumph tour footage
 
The deal—touted by both Sony and Mr. Jackson's estate as the most lucrative recording contract ever— guarantees the estate at least $200 million. With 10 albums over seven years, the deal will involve a mix of previously unreleased songs and new packages of familiar ones.
So does that in red not worry anyone but me? Do i see yet ANOTHER greatest hits album in the future? Am i misreading this?
 
you didn't misread it, it will happen for sure.

The deal retroactively covers the soundtrack album to "This Is It," plus a range of other releases, some of which have been mapped out, with others to be determined later. An album of previously unreleased songs is likely to hit stores before the end of this year, and another collection is due out later. The deal is also likely to cover expanded reissues of Mr. Jackson's albums "Off the Wall" and "Bad," as well as collections of remixes. A DVD of all of Mr. Jackson's music videos is likely to be created at some point.
 
Ten albums in 7 years does sound like saturation, one a year would be enough. Why rush them and have everything out there by 2017, they are still releasing Elvis material, i think they should stagger the releases a lot more like maybe one at the end of this year/ start of next and then the next one in 2012. Even when Michael was in his prime he wasn't releasing albums at this rate.
 
I was the among the first to say we should keep positive about any new realeases. I thought this would take longer and certainly I expect Sony would be finally out. But I am but a fool. This world is crazy enough and I, after all, I know nothing.

I will never forget MJ with the "Sony kills music" sign... and yet, I know for sure I will be more than willing to buy any of those "new" 10 records.... BR...DVD.... etc.

I feel like a nasty traitor... and I don't even know why

:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:
 
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