Billboard

From The Desk Of... Lonny Olinick

CEO,AWAL

- BY GLENN PEOPLES

ARTIST developmen­t isn’t dead, but it sure has changed. Two decades ago, a 20-something jazz musician named Norah Jones became a breakout star for Blue Note Records, a traditiona­l route to stardom when people still bought CDs and social media didn’t exist. Last year’s breakout jazz artist, Laufey, cultivated a fan base on TikTok and posts sheet music for her songs online so fans can download it before the recordings come out.

To AWAL CEO Lonny Olinick, Laufey’s success is a sign of the times. The Icelandic singer built an online following by herself, but she needed a team to develop her career and handle marketing and promotion logistics. Her second AWAL album, Bewitched, topped Billboard’s Jazz Albums and Traditiona­l Jazz Albums charts in September. “We’re seeing this real inflection point where artists are starting to, with their own teams and then between the team and AWAL, realize that there are no barriers in what can be achieved,” says Olinick, who earned an MBA from Stanford Business School and worked at consulting firm Bain & Company before joining Kobalt in 2016.

Artists such as JVKE, whose “Golden Hour” reached No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2022, and Mercury Prize winner Little Simz have used AWAL to find success outside of the major-label system. AWAL’s services-focused approach is becoming the norm as major labels increasing­ly provide distributi­on, marketing, promotion, accounting and even financing without needing to own the rights to artists’ recordings as part of standard deals. Sony Music acquired AWAL in 2022 to complement its labels and its distributi­on business, The Orchard. Universal Music Group is also building its own artist services business, through a revamped Virgin Label Group.

Paradoxica­lly, services-based music companies still have to do many of the same things as traditiona­l labels — just with different deals. Only recently, Olinick says, has the 16-year-old company truly met that challenge. “Last year and the year before were probably the first years where we fully realized that vision, where I’m confident that we can do all of the things that exist in the traditiona­l world.”

Most people in the music industry understand record labels and distributo­rs, but services-based companies are a bit harder to get. How would you describe AWAL to the uninitiate­d?

The most important part of music in my mind is artist developmen­t. You try to find artists who have great music, compelling stories and a work ethic and try to help them forge their own path. And throughout history, the best artists have been artists who don’t fit in a box, and the path that they take is completely bespoke. And you can’t do it again the same way. What we’ve tried to do is build a company that’s the best in the world at doing that — at finding outlier artists who have great stories to tell and helping them grow. You need a great marketing team, a great digital marketing team, radio, synch and branding — all the things that exist in the traditiona­l world. What we’ve tried to do is build a company that can do all those things, just with a different business model to keep the economics in favor of the artist.

You don’t have an everyone’s-welcome model — you choose who you want to work with. How do you do that?

We’re very opinionate­d about music. It’s really important as a company to have that creative, A&R-driven aesthetic. There’s three dimensions to it in my mind. There’s the music: Does

the music speak to people? Two, is there a story to be told, and does this person want to communicat­e something beyond just the music that’s interestin­g and compelling? And three, does the person have a work ethic? Being successful in music requires relentless­ly hard work on all sides.

Tell me about the staff on the creative side, as well as the administra­tive one.

We do everything, but the majority of our staff is focused on A&R, marketing and creative. That’s where we think we can be different and where we can help our artists tell stories. There’s 180 people across 14 offices. It’s run as a global company. If we find a record in Sweden, the U.S. company can jump on it, or the U.K. company or the Canadian one. Everyone is working collaborat­ively to try to do the best they can for the artist. And in each of those offices, we have traditiona­l marketing, digital marketing, synch, brand partnershi­ps, publicity — we basically do everything that an artist needs largely in-house. And then to the extent that we feel like we need something beyond what our 180 people can do, we will partner.

What’s the financial commitment when you work with an artist? Are you always writing a check?

It depends. Some of the deals are unfunded. We’re fortunate to be a part of Sony, so if it makes sense and we believe in the opportunit­y, there’s no check we couldn’t write if it made sense. But each deal is bespoke for the artist. We try to put as much money into marketing as we possibly can because we believe that that’s the thing we can do that hopefully makes a difference.

Sony acquired AWAL in 2022 and it already owned The Orchard. How do the two work together?

The whole Sony ecosystem makes a ton of sense, and AWAL and The Orchard are great examples of that. The Orchard is best in class at supporting record companies. And if you look at the scale at which they operate, and the quality of what they do on behalf of labels, there’s just no one who’s doing that kind of work. It’s an incredible team led by Brad [Navin] and Colleen [Theis], who are just incredible executives. I look at us in a very similar way: the best at doing artist developmen­t in this nontraditi­onal way. Being able to work together on tools and distributi­on is a great advantage for our clients and for The Orchard’s clients.

Some artists have gone from majors or big indies to AWAL, including Nick Cave, Cold War Kids and Jungle. Have some artists gone from AWAL to majors?

Our job is to develop the best artists in the world. And I think if we do that — especially if we do that at any scale — there’s going to be certain artists where the deal offered by a major is really compelling. Early on, we saw a lot more artists who would migrate and go do another deal. We developed Steve Lacy, Omar Apollo and Kim Petras — artists who have gone on and had real success at majors.

You’ve had some time to integrate into Sony. How has being part of this larger company changed your life as a CEO?

Anytime you go into these things you have aspiration­s for what it will be. At the same time, [merger and acquisitio­n] deals tend not to be what you expected them to be. People think that I’m sometimes saying the company line, and it couldn’t be further from the truth: The experience has been phenomenal. That comes down to two dimensions. Rob [Stringer, Sony Music CEO] is just an incredible music executive who comes from an A&R perspectiv­e. Being a part of a company where he sets the tone that music is at the center of everything you do has made us a better company. And because of that, it has basically been, “Here’s all these resources that Sony has that you can take advantage of, but continue to run the company the way you have, because we’ve had tons of success doing it.” It has all been additive.

We have more resources to invest. We have better technology. We can partner with Sony in certain markets where it makes sense. We’re out there building local businesses in Spain, Brazil, Nigeria and India. The Sony team has been incredibly supportive. Everyone sees that this is a meaningful part of the business and because AWAL is so music-centered and so is Sony, there’s just a lot of mutual respect and collaborat­ion. It has been nothing short of reenergizi­ng in an already energized business.

The music business is undergoing some contractio­n with layoffs and consolidat­ion. Do you foresee laying people off, or are you hiring?

We’re actively hiring. We hired a head of hip-hop and R&B last year in Norva Denton. We hired a senior vp of A&R in Chris [Foitel]. We hired Cami [Operé], who’s our publicist. We just hired a new CFO [Sumit Chatterjee]. We’ve hired in Spain, Brazil and Nigeria. We bought a company in India [digital distributi­on firm OKListen]. So, we’re actively in the market because the business continues to grow. We had our best year last year; we’ll have our best year this year.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ED BY MAGGIE SHANNON ?? Olinick photograph­ed Jan. 10 at AWAL’s offices in Los Angeles.
PHOTOGRAPH­ED BY MAGGIE SHANNON Olinick photograph­ed Jan. 10 at AWAL’s offices in Los Angeles.
 ?? ?? This “thing with eyes is something my son made for me,” Olinick says. The feeling of being watched “keeps me motivated every day. The small trophy is from our office awards for ‘Person on the Phone the Most.’ I take great pride in that.”
This “thing with eyes is something my son made for me,” Olinick says. The feeling of being watched “keeps me motivated every day. The small trophy is from our office awards for ‘Person on the Phone the Most.’ I take great pride in that.”
 ?? ?? “The Marshall cabinet is actually a refrigerat­or,” Olinick says. “My office tends to have items from our artists, but the exception is that Beatles collectibl­e — I don’t have anything to do with The Beatles, but it reminds me to aspire to work with the greatest artists.”
“The Marshall cabinet is actually a refrigerat­or,” Olinick says. “My office tends to have items from our artists, but the exception is that Beatles collectibl­e — I don’t have anything to do with The Beatles, but it reminds me to aspire to work with the greatest artists.”
 ?? ?? A pingpong table that Olinick says “we have artists sign when they’re in the L.A. office.”
A pingpong table that Olinick says “we have artists sign when they’re in the L.A. office.”
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? “I love art of all types and take a lot of inspiratio­n from culture,” Olinick says. “These books cover amazing music, art and sneaker culture.”
“I love art of all types and take a lot of inspiratio­n from culture,” Olinick says. “These books cover amazing music, art and sneaker culture.”

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