Billboard

02 LUCIAN GRAINGE

CHAIRMAN/CEO UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP

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Not content with his position atop the biggest global music company with the largest U.S. recorded-music market share, in 2023, Grainge continued to redefine what it means to be an industry leader. In his annual letter to UMG staff at the beginning of last year, He emphasized the need for an “updated model” for the music business, advocating for an “artist-centric” approach to streaming royalties that would aim to eliminate fraud and boost payouts to real artists.

His clarion call resulted in new proposals from Deezer and Spotify and partnershi­ps with TIDAL and SoundCloud to study how artists could benefit further from the industry’s dominant revenue generator. In late summer, Grainge partnered with YouTube to find ways for artists to capitalize on the opportunit­ies that emerging artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology is creating, and in the fall, he also launched the company’s Responsibl­e AI initiative, which lobbied Congress to put guardrails in place to protect creators and rights holders. UMG also used its might to look beyond music, establishi­ng programs addressing environmen­tal stability, sustainabi­lity, health care and homelessne­ss.

None of that would matter as much if Grainge wasn’t being just as attentive to his primary responsibi­lities, and on the home front, UMG thrived, increasing its current market share from 33.6% in 2022 to 35.8% in 2023 while releasing eight of the 10 biggest albums in the United States, according to Luminate — all of which were delivered by Republic Records, Billboard’s top label of the year for the third year running. Through the company’s fiscal third quarter, UMG generated

7.9 billion euros (approximat­ely $8.8 billion), a 6.8% increase in year-over-year growth that executive vp/CFO Boyd Muir said on an earnings call was “beyond our expectatio­n and guidance.” In his 2024 new year’s letter to staff, Grainge wrote that, moving forward, he aims to do nothing less than create “the blueprint for the labels of the future” — ensuring that, in an industry evolving at a dizzying velocity, UMG remains, as Grainge noted,

“the most successful company in the history of the music industry.” Mic drop.

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