Leonard Cohen Estate Sells Publishing Catalog

Music

Leonard Cohen Estate Sells Publishing Catalog

Hipgnosis Songs Fund—which also owns works from Lindsey Buckingham and Neil Young—purchased the catalog for an undisclosed sum

Image may contain Leonard Cohen Human Person Face Head Photo Photography and Portrait

Leonard Cohen, August 1967. (Photo by Jack Robinson/Getty Images)

Leonard Cohen’s estate has sold the entirety of his songwriting catalog—some 278 songs—to Hipgnosis Songs Fund for an undisclosed sum, Rolling Stone reports. 

The sale includes the “songwriter’s share” of 127 songs in Cohen’s “Stranger Music” catalog, which includes everything published from the start of his career through 2000—such as “Hallelujah” and “First We Take Manhattan”—as well as an additional 84 derivative works. The firm also acquired everything in his “Old Ideas” catalog, which includes the copyrights, “publisher’s share,” and “songwriter’s share” of every Cohen song written from 2001 until his death in 2016.

Hipgnosis was founded by former artist manager Merck Mercuriadis and Chic’s Nile Rodgers. The firm has acquired several major publishing catalogs from legacy artists, including Fleetwood Mac’s Lindsey Buckingham, Jimmy Iovine, and Neil Young

Read more about Hipgnosis in “What to Know About Music’s Copyright Gold Rush” on the Pitch.

Content

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Articles You May Like

Slim Dunlap, Former Replacements Guitarist, Dies at 73
Lindsay Hubbard Defends Monetizing Pregnancy Amid $100,000 Paycheck
Best of 2024: 10 Horror Games You Might Have Missed in 2024
It Ends With Us Controversy Expands As Justin Baldoni’s Ex-Publicist Files A Lawsuit
Pete Buttigieg epically roasts New Jersey amidst fears of an alien invasion