Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin - Taylor’s Version: The Million-Dollar Plot Twist
Episode Date: June 5, 2025When Taylor Swift announced she had officially bought back the masters to her music catalog, it wasn’t just a win for Swifties—it was a seismic moment for the entertainment business. Today, Nicole... unpacks the multimillion-dollar money trail behind the scenes, from record labels to private equity firms, and explains how Swift outmaneuvered the industry to reclaim her life’s work. It’s a story about ownership, leverage, and beating the system—plus, Nicole shares how listeners can invest in music royalties themselves. Because when it comes to showbiz… the business part matters most.
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I'm Nicole Lapin, the only financial expert you don't need a dictionary to understand.
It's time for some money rehab. Taylor Swift just announced that she bought back the Masters to her music catalog.
And this is big news if you're Swiftie, of course, but even if you're not, this is actually
not just a story about Taylor.
It is one of the most dramatic and high-stakes stories in the history of the entertainment
business.
And the money trail touches on private equity, copyright law, billion dollar tours,
and affects the future of music.
So I'm gonna unpack the background of this deal,
what it means not just for Taylor Swift,
but for the entire music industry,
and how you can actually invest in your favorite artists
because we can't forget show business is big business
that we can profit from too.
This saga starts back in 2019. Taylor had just wrapped up her stadium tour for Reputation,
which at the time was the highest-grossing North American concert tour in history and
grossed over $345 million. She had already won Grammys, released six studio albums, and
smashed charting and sales records. That year, she left Big Machine Records,
the Nashville-based label that signed her as a teenager.
She had moved over to Universal Music Group
and negotiated a deal that gave her ownership of her masters,
starting with the Lover album in 2019.
That was a power move,
and definitely the exception in the industry, not the rule.
A master recording, by the way,
is the original version of a song or an album, so it's the
source from which all the copies are made. What makes ownership of masters so valuable
is that it means you control how and when the song is used, like in commercials, movies,
video games, and even live performances. If you own the masters, you also earn significantly more money when
it's streamed, bought, or licensed. Most artists don't actually own their masters.
The record label usually owns the masters. That means labels are the ones that call the
shots and are the ones that profit the most from the masters. In a perfect world, this
is a fair agreement because the label incurs a lot of costs in order to represent and market
their artists, so this is how they make back their money.
Now Taylor owning the Masters under her agreement with UMG was a big deal, but the Masters of
her iconic first six studio albums, Taylor Swift, Fearless, Speak Now, Red, 1989, and
Reputation, were all owned by her former label, Big Machine Records.
And then Scooter Braun acquired Big Machine Records through his company, Ithaca Holdings.
Scooter Braun is the music manager who's often credited with discovering Justin Bieber
and has also represented artists like Ariana Grande, Demi Lovato, and Kanye West, someone
with whom Taylor had a very public and messy history with. You know the lore.
The deal gave Scooter control over Taylor's first six studio albums.
Scooter paid a reported $300 million for the deal, and you can imagine how valuable Taylor's
masters are.
I mean, licensing alone here?
Her songs have been in shows and movies like The Hunger Games, Grey's Anatomy, Ballers,
Where the Crowd Adds Sing, Fifty Shades Darker, How to Be Single, Letters to Juliet, New Girl, The Bear, I Could Go On, and on and on. And whoever owns the
master recordings also has the exclusive rights to publicly perform the recording.
This is why Taylor would later say that Big Machine Records wouldn't allow her to perform
her own songs from her earlier albums at the American Music Awards.
Swift was not consulted on this sale.
In a statement posted at the time, she said, quote, For years I asked, pleaded for the chance
to own my work. Instead, I was given an opportunity to sign back up to Big Machine Records and earn
one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in, end quote. That feels pretty predatory, right? It's like telling an author, yeah, you could have
your previous book back, but only if you agreed to write a sequel and then give us that sequel
too. So she walked away from that offer and she made her feelings very, very clear. This
deal, she said, stripped me of my life's work.
In 2020, an investment firm called Shamrock Capital bought Swift's catalog
from Braun and paid reportedly more than $300 million for it. And remember, just one year
earlier, Braun had paid $300 million for all of Big Machine, not just for Taylor's Masters.
She said that Shamrock gave her an opportunity to partner, but she rejected it once she found
out that Shamrock's agreement with Braun allowed him
to profit from her catalogue for many years. She said Braun's ability to profit from her work was
quote, a non-starter. Taylor's next move was pretty genius. She did something that very few
artists have ever tried to do and no one has done with such success. She started re-recording her
old albums. The goal was to offer fans an alternative to the originals, versions that she owns.
These are the albums she released under the same name, just with that Taylor's Version edition in parentheses.
She released Fearless, Taylor's Version in 2021, then Red, Taylor's Version, then Speak Now, and 1989.
Each one was a massive success. 1989 Taylor's version had an even bigger
opening week than the original did. According to Billboard, it debuted with the equivalent
of 1.65 million album sales in the US, making it the biggest week of her career at the time.
The Tortured Poets department has since topped it.
So this does sound genius. And kind of like copyright infringement.
You might wonder how Taylor can re-release the same music, same song titles, and not get sued
by the people who own her masters. Well, here's where music industry standards get really
interesting. Typically, every song recorded by an artist signed with a label in the US anyway
has two copyrights.
The master recording, which is the aspect we've been talking about, and then there's
a second copyright, the composition, which covers lyrics and music.
So Taylor did own the composition rights for her first six albums, which allowed her to
legally release her own versions of her back catalog.
The next album that was on deck for re-release was the Reputation album. Taylor has been teasing this for a hot minute now
and as of late last month, the first Taylor's version of a song off the Reputation album was
included in a Handmaid's Tale episode. But honestly, we don't really need a
Reputation re-release anymore now because Taylor owns all of her masters.
On May 30th, Taylor announced that she bought back her masters from Shamrock Capital. She wrote to
her fans a play on her own lyrics in a very Taylor way. She said, quote, I can't thank you enough
for helping me reunite with this art that I've dedicated my life to but have never owned until
now. The best things that have ever been mine finally actually
are. She now owns her original recordings, music videos, concert films, album art, photography,
and even unreleased songs. The price was not disclosed, but sources told the New York Times
that she paid close to what Shamrock had initially paid Braun. Beyond the catalog, Taylor owning
her masters means that she'll bring in even more revenue
from her work. Already, Taylor is number 21 on the Forbes ranking of the richest self-made women with
an estimated net worth of $1.6 billion. Billboard estimates that the masters of Taylor's first six
albums made Shamrock Capital $60 million a year on average. If that trend continues, we can definitely
expect Taylor's net worth to go
up to nearly $1.7 billion, which would tie her with Kim Kardashian on the Forbes list.
Now this story is incredible, but it's also incredibly rare. Not every artist gets to do
what Taylor just did. JoJo, for example, the artist who became super famous for her song
Too Little Too Late in 2006, signed to Black Ground Records when
she was a teenager. The label withheld her music and wouldn't allow her to release
new material. She ended up re-recording her early work two years before Taylor made it
cool. But without the platform or the fan base that Taylor Swift has, her re-recordings
didn't make the same kind of splash. Still, it was a statement. But examples of this go
back farther.
The Beatles' catalog has changed hands a bunch of times.
In the 1980s, Michael Jackson outbid Paul McCartney
for ownership of their publishing rights.
McCartney didn't regain control until 2017
after a legal battle and the expiration of copyright terms.
So Taylor's success here is not just a personal victory.
It is a business case study.
Her ability to create economic leverage through the ERAs Tour, re-recordings, and sheer fan
loyalty made it possible for her to reclaim her art.
But let's just double-click on the tour for a second. The ERAs Tour reportedly sold over
$2 billion in ticket sales across 149 shows. It caused a ticket master meltdown, sparked
a bracelet economy, and it turned Swift into the GDP of a small country. With that kind
of momentum, she didn't just revisit the past, she bought it. And she did what very
few artists ever get the chance to do. She beat the system.
So whether you're an artist, an entrepreneur, or an investor,
there's a lesson here.
Owning your work is everything.
If you're working on your own business,
negotiating a contract,
or deciding how to monetize your creativity,
remember Taylor.
Read the fine print, push for ownership,
and never be afraid to bet on yourself.
For today's tip, you can take straight to the bank.
There are ways you can invest in your favorite artists
right now while also empowering them to keep creative control.
There are new platforms cropping up that let you invest directly in music royalties. Royalty
Exchange, for example, lets you buy shares of music royalties so you can invest in the
rights to a song that earns money every time it's streamed, used in a commercial, or played
on the radio. It's like earning dividends from a stock, only this time the stock is a pop song. Just remember, like any investment, there are risks, and
because royalty ownership is so new, this is particularly risky. If you believe in an
artist though, this can be a way to back them and build wealth. But royalties can really
fluctuate, platforms can shut down, and not every song is a hit. So don't spend any more
money than you're willing to lose.
Money Rehab is a production of Money News Network.
I'm your host, Nicole Lapin.
Money Rehab's executive producer is Morgan LeVoy.
Our researcher is Emily Holmes.
Do you need some Money Rehab?
And let's be honest, we all do.
So email us your money questions, moneyrehab at moneynewsnetwork.com to potentially have
your questions answered on the show or even have a one-on-one intervention with me and follow us on
Instagram at MoneyNews and TikTok at MoneyNews Network for exclusive video content. And lastly,
thank you. No, seriously, thank you. Thank you for listening and for investing in yourself, which is the most important investment you can make.