
Every time you hit play on a song — any song — there's a very good chance the money flows to one of three companies. Not the artist. Not even a music label you've heard of. Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, and Warner Music Group collectively control over 85% of the recorded music industry in the United States. The rest of the world isn't far behind.
This didn't happen overnight. It happened across decades of carefully executed acquisitions, mergers, and buyouts — a slow corporate swallowing of virtually every independent label, music publisher, and catalog that ever built real value. Each time an indie label found success, one of the Big Three would simply buy it. The cycle has repeated itself for over 60 years.
Back in the 1950s, hundreds of independent labels competed for space on the radio dial. By the 1980s, global conglomerates with cash to burn had discovered that music rights were a gold mine. In 1987, Sony paid $2 billion for Columbia Records alone. Two years later, Dutch company PolyGram spent $500 million on A&M Records. The era of consolidation had fully arrived.
What makes the Big Three's grip uniquely powerful isn't just market share — it's copyright ownership that stretches back nearly 100 years and legally can't expire for decades more. The Beatles. Queen. Michael Jackson. Frank Sinatra. Virtually every song that shaped the 20th century sits in one of these three vaults, generating royalties forever.
For artists, the math has always been brutal. A new artist signed to a major label typically keeps only 10–16% of their recording revenue. The label pockets the rest — often 80–90% — while also retaining ownership of the master recordings. Meaning the label owns the song long after the artist stops seeing any money from it. Country legend Merle Haggard had 37 top-10 singles and 23 number-one hits, and never received a single royalty check from his major label until he left and signed with an indie.
Streaming was supposed to change things. Instead, it arguably tightened the grip. The major labels negotiated equity stakes in Spotify before it launched, ensuring that even the platform trying to disrupt them was partly owned by them. They also leverage their catalogs to force streaming platforms into favorable placement deals — ensuring their artists dominate the playlists you think are curated just for you.
Today, the Big Three still aren't done acquiring. Universal Music recently moved to purchase Downtown Music — a major services company for independent artists — for $775 million. European competition authorities launched an investigation, worried the deal would eliminate one of the last meaningful alternatives for artists trying to operate outside the Big Three's orbit.
The artists whose music moves you built their careers on their talent. But the corporations who own the rights to that music have made far more money from it than most of those artists ever will. The next time a song makes you feel something, know that the feeling was always free. The rights to it never were.



















