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Sound Royalties

Sound Royalties has been a resource for the music industry for 10 years, advancing money to artists, songwriters, producers and other entities against their royalty income streams. And if there is one message that the company consistently emphasizes, it’s that Sound Royalties doesn’t use clients’ music rights as collateral, so it can never secure ownership of those rights.

In Sound Royalties’ parlance, instead of loans, the company primarily provides advances, and recipients of those funds are collectively referred to as “creatives.”

Sound Royalties also makes clear that it doesn’t charge interest; instead, advances come with fixed fees expressed in dollars. The company also doesn’t charge late fees, and a client’s credit rating doesn’t factor into any deals because the advance is repaid from one or more of a client’s income streams.

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Contrary to standard music industry practice, Sound Royalties doesn’t require 100% recoupment from the income streams until the advance is fully paid off.

Depending on the deal, the company may only take some of the royalties of an assigned income stream from one of the creative’s music companies — labels, distributors, publishers or collection rights organizations, which are collectively known as “payors,” according to Sound Royalties — and it will pass through the remainder of income to the client.

Since 2021, Sound Royalties has been owned by GoDigital Media Group and the investment firm MEP Capital.

Alex Heiche, with a background in software for high tech and in special finance firms, founded the company in 2014. As he explains, Sound Royalties is not “a label, publisher or distributor. We don’t replace them; we work in concert with them.

“So when creatives come to us, we provide the financing, but they stay with these excellent companies that they’ve chosen to work with,” he says. “And we’re not taking a percentage of future income. The advance is a fixed dollar amount for a fixed period of time. We’re obsessed with transparency.”

Company executives also emphasize their pursuit of a relationship-based business.

“Part of Alex’s original vision is we really try hard to create relationships,” says Sound Royalties president Michael Bizenov, who joined the company in 2018 after a career in consumer banking and mortgages. “We’re not here just to do transactions. They are important to us, yes, because it’s a way to grow a business. But we want to do it in a very healthy way.”

That’s also why in times of industry turmoil, like during the pandemic, Sound Royalties set up funding pools for cost-free advances to creatives in need.

Also, the company believes in helping creatives beyond financing deals.

“We [meet] with all levels of creative people, including those who may be starting their career,” Bizenov says. “So we’re very committed to doing financial-literacy seminars. We also are talking to the most sophisticated creatives and their business teams and helping them meet their financial goals.”

Clients of Sound Royalties include (clockwise from top left) Tank, DJ Khaled, Rich Robinson, Alejandra Guzmán, Brent Faiyaz, Sonia Leigh and Dylan LeBlanc.

Illustration by Andrei Cojocaru

In the beginning, how did industry companies react to the advances you were proposing?

Alex Heiche: Sound Royalties was launched with the vision to provide artist-friendly funding using creative-friendly funding solutions. So initially, we did advances from [income streams from performing rights organizations] ASCAP and BMI, and then we slowly evolved from there, adding SESAC, and then we started adding publisher, label and distributor transactions. In 2018, we did our first international transaction with PRS [for Music].

Michael Bizenov: Today, we’ve expanded to working in 18 countries and on three continents with over 160 payors around the globe that are sending payments to us to service their clients, and we’re onboarding new [payors] every month.

Did music companies first see you as adversarial to their relationships with their artists and songwriters?

Heiche: Payors see that we’re not taking their ­clients. We’re not getting in the way of their business. We don’t do distribution, nor publishing; we’re not a label or a collection society. We stay in our lane, providing financing. We’re there to facilitate something and ease the process, so we have good relationships on the payor side and on the creative side.

What’s the source of your funding?

Bizenov: We have bank lines [of credit]. Since early last year, we have more than doubled our access to bank financing. We also self-fund some things out of our profits. And we have access to two additional lines of private capital if we need it.

Did you have bank lines when you started out?

Heiche: No, it started off with funding [from] the balance sheet and growing from there. We pioneered this type of financing and advances. So it took time to build a track record to be able to walk banks through it.

What kind of income streams do you like to focus on when making advances?

Heiche: Creatives are earning a lot of different income streams, and we work with most of them. As the industry continues to evolve, we expanded beyond sound recording and composition [income] and started doing YouTube [income] financing for advances.

We are now even in entertainment production financing. We do tour financing. We even offer bridge financing for creatives looking for a very short-term solution as they’re maybe selling a catalog.

Do you put together custom deals for each client or offer a menu with options?

Heiche: The beauty of our model is it’s a bespoke, white glove customer service. Every creative and every company entity that comes to us for financing gets to speak with a live person that understands what their needs are and develops options for them to review.

You don’t require documentation like tax returns or W2 forms with an application. How else are your advances different from a bank loan?

Heiche: The advance is based strictly on their royalties and projections of those royalties. We provide a one-page summary sheet so they can see the fixed cost in a fixed dollar amount for a fixed period of time. If it takes longer, there are no late fees or penalties. The same if payment comes in sooner.

What are the minimum income streams and maximum advances that you work with?

Heiche: We try to help as much of the industry as we can, and that’s why the bar is as low as it is. Right now, the baseline for both is $5,000 per year per royalty stream. But we go over $10 million for advances.

You’ve said that building relationships is an important part of the Sound Royalties business plan. How does that help grow your business?

Bizenov: A big part of our business comes from referrals, and that’s something that we work hard on. “Customer service” is a mantra in our company because it’s the right thing to do and it also grows the business.

We love the referrals that we get from the managers, business managers, attorneys and companies that are out there. It’s very flattering to us and very reinforcing.

In making advances, how do you calculate risk?

Bizenov: There are probably about 12 or 14 inputs that go into our [analysis]. It’s the things that you would imagine: What is the depth of the catalog? Is 85% of the income coming from two songs — [which] is pretty risky — or is it something that’s more spread out? Is [a work] evergreen and out there for a lot of years so you can trace the performance, or is it something that’s relatively fresh? Based on that, we then come up with a risk analysis and a price.

Does your recoupment come from all streams, or do you choose to be paid back from one or two streams? And do you take 100% recoupment or only a portion?

Heiche: We can focus on specific streams that make the most sense and help a client achieve what they’re trying to accomplish [in terms of cash flow]. Does the client want to pay us back in one year or five years? If it’s five years, for example, we may take less of their income stream per year, or it’s one year we may take more. Either way, the rest [of the income] we pass through to the creative.

What is the average type of advance deal in terms of timeline and recoupment?

Bizenov: We’d rather see somebody do [deals] more conservatively and make sure they get a chance to get their cash flow. That is why we have a very high return rate of customers who come back to us for more than one deal.

As for deal terms, the average is three to five years. We can go longer and we can go shorter, but that’s where the median would lie.

What is the value of advances that Sound Royalties made last year?

Heiche: As a private company, there are some limitations on some data that we can give out.

Can you talk about growth?

Bizenov: Our monthly volume is growing by 50%. We’re pretty proud of our level of growth.

You have also alerted artists and the industry about royalties that weren’t paid to them. How does that play into your business model?

Heiche: When a creative comes through our door, our royalty specialists say, “OK, so you’re a songwriter. Who do you collect your writer’s share from? Who does your publishing or administration?” We just start to have that conversation.

And quite often we find that creatives aren’t collecting on all the income streams that they should be, so then we point them in the right direction. We’re constantly working with creatives ensuring that they understand the various income streams that they’re entitled to receive.

Bizenov: There are nuances. It’s fractionalized, for lack of a better term, because the incomes come from all different directions. So it’s easy for things to fall through the cracks sometimes.

You have said that providing clients with transparency is very important. How else do you show this?

Bizenov: The day before the funding is scheduled to take place, we have a separate department that gets on the phone with the end user and walks through the mechanics of the deal. That team is trained so that if they sense hesitation or lack of understanding, they stop the process to make sure that the creative understands every aspect of how it works, what’s coming, what’s owed.

Our biggest nightmare isn’t not getting a deal; it’s somebody out there saying, “Hey, [Sound Royalties] didn’t tell me everything.”

Are you saying your reputation is more important than doing deals?

Heiche: We’ve developed a reputation through the years of being the good guys, and that’s from things like this independent compliance department having a call with the creative walking through everything to ensure that there’s transparency. If people have great things to say about us, that’s because of our transparency.

This story appears in the Nov. 16, 2024, issue of Billboard.

Dominican rapper and dembow star El Alfa has signed a multi-million deal in the eight figures with music industry finance firm Sound Royalties.
After evaluating El Alfa’s revenue streams, Sound Royalties will advance El Alfa the sum of money ahead of his upcoming tour and album, El Rey Del Dembow — set for release Oct. 19 on his own El Jefe Records. The advance contemplates the full range of El Alfa’s income, including his catalog, his upcoming recordings, his streaming numbers and his tour income.

“I’ve been speaking with Sound Royalties for years, and the time finally made sense for us to work together. The best advice I ever received was from [Sound Royalties CEO/founder] Alex Heiche and his team, telling me to register and organize my royalty streams and that whatever I do – don’t sell,” El Alfa said in a statement. “It was because I didn’t sell that I am now able to leverage my back catalog to invest in my future. This multi-million-dollar funding will be instrumental in continuing to build my legacy and cement my influence in the Latin music space.”

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Founded in 2014, Sound Royalties specializes in royalty financing for music creatives, independent labels, publishers and distributors. The company is a subsidiary of GoDigital Media Group, the company founded by Jason Peterson that also includes indie label and distributor Cinq Music Group and social media rights manager AdShare.

Sound Royalties’ business model isn’t predicated on projections of revenue, but rather, based on what an artist already has generated. The company gives creatives an advance and sets a set fee to be paid back in addition to the original advance. That set fee, says Heiche, does not change.

“There is no penalty and we don’t take copyright or ownership,” he says. “At first it [some thought it] was too good to be true, and now they realize it is true. It is a good model.”

Currently, the company works with music creatives in 16 countries across all genres, and has partnered or worked with artists like Pitbull, Alejandra Guzman and DJ Khaled.

In El Alfa’s case, Sound Royalties is financing what Heiche describes as “existing income streams. It’s not a projection. It’s what he’s already doing. We did an analysis of what his revenue streams are generating and they’re very impressive. His numbers justify the advance we’re giving him.”

“Alfa has carved out a legacy of his own in the Latin music community, pioneering his own style of Dembow music[…] It’s an honor to be the financial partner that he has chosen to fund his continued growth for years to come.”

Sean Heydorn was promoted to the joint role of senior vp of Rise Records and frontline catalogue at BMG. The announcement follows last week’s news that BMG has fully integrated its catalog and new release recordings businesses. In his new dual role, Heydorn will continue leading Rise Records while overseeing a newly-established frontline catalog team that will be responsible for marketing recent releases (i.e. projects designated as having been released 18 months ago or more) while ensuring the ongoing success of frontline music. The Los Angeles-based executive will continue reporting to executive vp of recorded music Dan Gill. Heydorn can be reached at sean.heydorn@bmg.com.

Tricia Arnold was promoted to executive vp of global artist/label services and sales at The Orchard, up from her prior role of senior vp of global label management and sales. Arnold will continue overseeing the company’s global distribution strategy and international sales and label services teams. The New York-based executive, who was named to Billboard‘s Women in Music List in 2023, will continue reporting to president/COO Colleen Theis. She can be reached at tarnold@theorchard.com.

Tim Plumley was promoted to vp of media and artist relations at UMe, the global catalog company of Universal Music Group. In the role, Plumley will strategize and execute 360-degree catalog media campaigns for both frontline album releases and catalog initiatives. Based in Los Angeles, he reports to executive vp of media and artist relations Sujata Murthy. Plumley can be reached at Tim.Plumley@umusic.com.

Sony Music Entertainment UK relaunched Epic Records UK and appointed Sarah Lockhart as president of the revamped label, effective May 1. Epic Records UK will relaunch as a frontline label alongside other Sony Music labels including RCA and Columbia. Lockhart takes on the role following a stint at Sony Music Publishing, where she was head of A&R for three years.

Jeff Geasey joined Page 1 Management as GM, West Coast out of Los Angeles. In the role, Geasey will sign new creators, service existing clients and work closely with Page 1 founder/CEO Ashley Page. He joins from Fast Casual Management, which he co-founded. Geasey can be reached at Jeff@page1management.com.

Sound Royalties announced several hires and promotions. On the promotions front, Shaun Kilmartin was named vp of technology and special projects; Allison Portlock was named vp of marketing; Marysol Aldaba was named royalty support manager; Emma Blake was named administration manager; Bryan Fried was named royalty analyst manager; Erin Regan was named marketing manager; and Kimberly Guisao was named digital marketing coordinator. New hires include Michael Aufiero as royalty specialist; Leandro Castro as junior systems administrator; Nicole Hanrahan as data management specialist; Natasha Mikazens as royalty specialist; Yvonne Swaby as accounting manager; Zachary Vega as royalty analyst; Kateleen Vera as royalty support specialist; and Christian Vernis as junior royalty specialist. Portlock can be reached at allison@soundroyalties.com.

Abby Sprague was promoted to vp of marketing at Mom+Pop Music. In her new role, she will run global campaigns for Mom+Pop artists and expand her roster to include SEB, Frances Forever and the newly-signed act Goth Babe.

Veteran music PR executive Cara Wodnicki departed her role as executive vp of publicity at BMF to launch her own firm, CSW Publicity. She will bring her personal roster of clients to the new company, including AJ McLean of the Backstreet Boys, J-pop act Perfume, Emergency Tiara, RADWIMPS and Canadian pop singer Olivia Lunny. She can now be reached at Cara@CSWPublicity.com.

J.R. Johnson was named director of communications at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. He joins from Refinery29, where he served as senior director of talent relations/special projects; he has also served in comms roles at Warner Bros. Records and Sunshine Sachs & Associates, among others.

Justin Levenson was named professional services product lead at OpenPlay, a leading asset management platform for the music industry. In his new role, Levenson will work with OpenPlay’s engineering team, clients and other stakeholders to ensure the platform is operating properly and meeting client needs, among other duties. He joins the company from Utopia Music, where he served as commercial director of financial services/senior product manager. Levenson can be reached at justin.levenson@openplay.co.

Emilia Huneke-Bergquist joined Stand Together Music to direct project management and events for the organization, which “unites the music industry, musicians, and their teams with proven change-makers to co-create solutions, starting with criminal justice, addiction recovery, education, free speech and peace, and ending the war on drugs,” according to a press release. Huneke-Bergquist will lead a cross-functional team of project managers and event professionals in facilitating marketing and communications efforts along with in-person and virtual experiences across the Stand Together community. Before officially joining the organization, she had previously worked with Stand Together on various partnerships. She can be reached at ehuneke-bergquist@standtogether.org.

Kylie Dembek was named country music project manager at ONErpm. She joins the company from Big Machine Label Group, where she worked as a strategic planning manager helping artists develop their radio and marketing strategies. In her new role, she will focus on creating and implementing release and marketing strategy for emerging and established artists. Dembek can be reached at kylie@onerpm.com.

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum named two new additions to its staff: Dave Paulson, who joins as writer-editor in the museum services department, and Austin Taylor, who was named director of event sales. Paulson will contribute to exhibitions, museum publications, public programs, online offerings and other educational initiatives; he was previously a reporter at The Tennessean. Taylor will lead the events and culinary department’s sales team while also being responsible for the event sales annual revenue goal. He was most recently senior sales manager with both the Hilton and HEI hotel brands and previously worked at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum between 2011 and 2017.

Away co-founder/CEO Jen Rubio has joined the board of directors at tvg hospitality, the venue group founded by Ben Lovett of Mumford & Sons.