Lyor throwing 300 in the bushes to work at Youtube

Vinny Lupton

Superstar
Joined
Jan 27, 2014
Messages
15,864
Reputation
2,990
Daps
49,005
http://www.billboard.com/files/pdfs/Bulletin/september-28-2016-billboard-bulletin.pdf

Lyor Cohen Named YouTube’s Global Head of Music

Lyor Cohen has been named global head of music at YouTube, the company has announced. Cohen is the founder and current CEO of 300, which has Fetty Wap, Young Thug and more signed to the label, Cohen had previously headed up Warner Music Group as its chairman/CEO of recorded music until 2012.

According to a YouTube spokeperson, Cohen will continue as CEO of 300 until December 5 of this year, after which that company’s management “will transition Lyor’s day-to-day responsibilities to the leadership team within the company.”

“Lyor is a lion of the music industry,” says YouTube’s Chief Business Officer Robert Kyncl in a statement. “From Rush to Def Jam to Island Def Jam to WMG then 300, he has consistently been a pioneer, charting the course for where music is heading. As we enter the growth era of the music industry, Lyor is in a position to make tremendous difference in accelerating that growth in a fair way for everyone. We are thrilled to welcome him to YouTube.”

Cohen has his work cut out for him at YouTube, particularly in repairing the company’s relationship with the music business. For the past year Kyncl has, effectively, been serving as the video streaming giant’s interim head of music 0- which has been a rough one for the company’s relationship with the music industry. Beginning in April of this year, music stakeholders began pressuring YouTube over what they dubbed “the value gap” -- that YouTube, despite being one of the most common digital destinations for music listening, was not paying rates on par with services like Spotify or Apple Music.

This pushback came in the wake of the company’s introduction of its YouTube Red subscription tier, and the YouTube Music app. In addition to the unrelenting pressure placed on it by the music industry, also faces an uphill battle in Brussels. The European Commission recently announced plans to overhaul the concept of “safe harbor,” a legal provision designed to protect usergenerated sites like YouTube from being liable for copyrighted material that is uploaded to their platforms.
 

KENNY DA COOKER

HARD ON HOES is not a word it's a LIFESTYLE
Supporter
Joined
Jun 9, 2012
Messages
31,450
Reputation
13,270
Daps
168,475
Reppin
F
That means making money in Hip Hop, at least like it used to be, is OVER.

Iovine left, Cohen is leaving.

Done.

This really means EVERYBODY IN HIP HOP who utilizes YOUTUBE as a platform is FUKKED.....

Now that YOUTUBE is getting into the subscription game and further monetizing its Music Streaming capabilities....they are about to become a real NASTY BEAST in the game

And who better to help them accomplish this than LYOR COHEN aka MEYER LANSKY :mjpls:
 

OnlyInCalifornia

Southern California/Vegas
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
19,939
Reputation
3,670
Daps
52,050
Reppin
The Coli's 420th member
This really means EVERYBODY IN HIP HOP who utilizes YOUTUBE as a platform is FUKKED.....

Now that YOUTUBE is getting into the subscription game and further monetizing its Music Streaming capabilities....they are about to become a real NASTY BEAST in the game

And who better to help them accomplish this than LYOR COHEN aka MEYER LANSKY :mjpls:

I bet they are going to start charging people to upload videos and put it in certain categories....if you upload music videos or your own music, need a membership for space....

It's not a good move for people who like YouTube but it certainly says something about the Hip Hop music industry...
 

grandpianos

All Star
Joined
Mar 13, 2013
Messages
727
Reputation
640
Daps
3,004
Reppin
NULL
That means making money in Hip Hop, at least like it used to be, is OVER.

Iovine left, Cohen is leaving.

Done.

it was always more money in the distribution end than the label end'

what's more interesting is that YouTube, Apple et al are getting these hip hop guys who are known for their relationship to the music themselves on that side of things instead of dudes from other industries

i can't say a good thing cuz lyor and iovine are notorious snakes... but their clout is still based on moves they made in hip hop
 

OnlyInCalifornia

Southern California/Vegas
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
19,939
Reputation
3,670
Daps
52,050
Reppin
The Coli's 420th member
what's more interesting is that YouTube, Apple et al are getting these hip hop guys who are known for their relationship to the music themselves on that side of things instead of dudes from other industries

Yup and I have a feeling others will go to different positions or consult with the other remaining companies.
 

KENNY DA COOKER

HARD ON HOES is not a word it's a LIFESTYLE
Supporter
Joined
Jun 9, 2012
Messages
31,450
Reputation
13,270
Daps
168,475
Reppin
F
*all content provided by Dame Dash will be deleted

*the phrase Culture Vulture will be Censored

*all Mos Def tracks will be pulled

*all 300 ent. Artists will recieve a complimentary 500k views

*Youtube viewers will be greeted with a new slogan.."YOUR thoughts of a revolution will NEVER BE TELEVISED"


ALL HAIL COHEN :russ: :snoop:

All jokes aside this is in sooo many ways FUKKED UP...
 

DarkmanX

All Star
Joined
Jun 27, 2014
Messages
4,575
Reputation
624
Daps
8,743
"remember when you could play just about any song on youtube?" - us in 5 years

God damn that hit hard. Real tizzy tho.

I mean its basically impossible to find Jay-Z material now thnx to his Tidal thing. I remember Youtube struggling with some of these issues back in 2007-2009 or so, when they started to get sued for copyright laws & all. Made alot of shyt get deleted.

Cant see Youtube having lasting legs in 5-10 years tho if it really goes down like that. Might be wrong of course.
 
Last edited:

Spin

All Star
Joined
Jul 11, 2012
Messages
1,010
Reputation
390
Daps
2,859
Google done sold itself to the devil I think :ohhh:

Google already made an investment in 300 when it was created. Lyor had the connect. As far as a power move, you gotta respect how Lyor made it work. The old guard in the industry doesn't like him, but now they will be forced to deal with him AGAIN. Iovine and Lyor both put themselves on the side of the cash pile vs the labels.
 
Top