ROLI go into administration; CEO Roland Lamb launches new music tech company
>ROLI, the UK music tech startup, has gone into administration, citing a smaller than expected market for the company’s products. The news comes despite the company receiving money from the UK government to help them survive the pandemic.
Founder and CEO Roland Lamb is starting a new company, Luminary, focusing on LUMI, ROLI’s piano learning platform.
“Ultimately what happened was that although the pro-focused products we initially developed were successful within their marketplace, the marketplace wasn’t big enough given our venture trajectory,” Lamb told Business Insider. “We had our eyes set on hypergrowth and that proved to be difficult.”
We first heard of ROLI in 2013 when they launched the Seaboard, an MPE controller that replaced standard piano keys with squishy ones. Although it received considerable attention, and was even featured in Hollywood blockbuster La La Land, this was a niche product that came in at a high price point.
In 2017, the company aimed for a wider market with the BLOCKS series of controllers. However, these launched with a limited software application and, despite high-profile backing from the likes of Pharrell Williams and Grimes, struggled to make an impact. Then, in 2019, came LUMI, a piano learning platform that combined a light-up keyboard and an educational app. Launched on Kickstarter, this smashed through its funding target, but backers complained of delays in shipping, and there were reports of build quality issues, too. ROLI later released an updated version that was said to be more durable and offer a better key action. The LUMI was relaunched as a production device.
Throughout this time, ROLI have received significant investment, acquiring other companies along the way – including music software developer FXpansion, responsible for the brand’s excellent Equator 2 and
Cypher 2 plugin synths. However, rumours of financial difficulties have been circling for some time.
The Telegraph reports that ROLI also received taxpayer funding from the UK government to help the company survive the pandemic. This came from the Future Fund, which gave between £125,000 and £5m to start-ups, on the proviso that these were matched by investors.
It remains to be seen if any investors, or the government, will get any of their money back, but The Telegraph also notes that Roland Lamb has now secured £5m of investment for Luminary from a company known as Hoxton Ventures.
“Our lead investor Hoxton Ventures was not prepared to fund ROLI and wanted, rather, to invest in Luminary to drive forward the consumer opportunity,” says Lamb. It’s thought that ROLI’s 70 staff will move to Luminary, which wants to become the ‘Peloton for piano’.
A Q&A page on the ROLI website says that all ROLI and LUMI products will continue to be supported as before, and that the respective brands, websites and social media pages will still exist. Existing product orders will also be honoured, though may arrive “a little later than expected”.
It has also been announced that the Luminary team plan to relaunch the Seaboard in 2022.
“DESPITE HIGHPROFILE BACKING, IT STRUGGLED TO MAKE AN IMPACT”