Taylor Swift announces she has acquired the rights to all of her music

Taylor Swift (Doug Peters/PA)
Taylor Swift has announced that she has acquired the rights to all of her music.
The 35-year-old also announced she has purchased the rights to all of her concert films, music videos, album art and photography, as well as unreleased songs, in an announcement on her website on Friday.
She also confirmed she will release Taylorâs Version re-recordings of her self-titled and Reputation albums.
In the announcement, the singer said: âIâm trying to gather my thoughts into something coherent, but right now my mind is just a slideshow. A flashback sequence of all the times I daydreamed about, wished for, and pined away for a chance to get to tell you this news.
âAll the times I was this close, reaching out for it, only for it to fall through. I almost stopped thinking it could ever happen, after 20 years of having the carrot dangled and then yanked away. But thatâs all in the past now.
âIâve been bursting into tears of joy at random intervals ever since I found out that this is really happening. I really get to say these words, all of the music Iâve ever made now belongs to me.
âAnd all my music videos, all the concert films, the album art and photography, the unreleased songs, the memories, the magic, the madness, every single era, my entire lifeâs work.
âTo say this is my greatest dream come true is actually being pretty reserved about it.â
Swift also thanked her fans for their âpassionate supportâ which she said is âwhy I was able to buy back my musicâ.
The singer added: âI canât thank you enough for helping to reunite me with this art that I have dedicated my life to, but have never my owned until now.â
Swift said the process of gaining ownership of her work was âhonest, fair, and respectfulâ and said she was âendlessly thankfulâ to private equity firm Shamrock Capital, which offered her the deal.
In a post on LinkedIn, Shamrock Capital said: âWe are thrilled with this outcome and are so happy for Taylor.â
The value of the deal has not been disclosed.
The singer announced plans to re-record all her songs in 2019 following a dispute with retired talent manager Scooter Braun after he acquired the recordings of her first six studio albums when he bought her former label.
Though the masters changed hands again after a deal with Shamrock Capital, Swift continued with a bid to regain ownership of the music by creating new versions of the songs.
She has been re-recording of all of her albums, re-releasing them as âTaylorâs Versionâ.
To date Swift has released new versions of her previous albums Fearless (2008), Red (2012), Speak Now (2010) and 1989 (2014), with Reputation and her self-titled debut yet to be re-released as Taylorâs Versions.
In the announcement Swift spoke about plans to release Taylor Swift (Taylorâs Version), originally released in 2006, and Reputation (Taylorâs Version), which was originally released in 2017.
She added: âI know, I know. What about (Reputation (Taylorâs Version))? Full transparency, I havenât even re-recorded a quarter of it. The Reputation album was so specific to that time in my life, and I kept hitting a stopping point when I tried to remake it.
âAll that defiance, that longing to be understood while feeling purposely misunderstood, that desperate hope, that shame-born snarl and mischief. To be perfectly honest, itâs the one album in those first six that I thought couldnât be improved upon by redoing it. Not the music, or photos, or videos.
âSo I kept putting it off, there will be a time (if youâre into the idea) for the unreleased vault tracks from that album to hatch.
âIâve already completely re-recorded my entire debut album, and I really love how it sounds now.
âThose two albums can still have their moments to re-emerge when the time is right, if that would be something you guys would be excited about.
âBut if it happens, it wonât be from a place of sadness and longing for what I wish I could have. It will just be a celebration now.â
Braun gained ownership of some of Swiftâs back catalogue in 2019 when his holding company, Ithaca Holdings, acquired her former label, Big Machine Label Group.
Swift signed with Big Machine, founded by former Universal executive Scott Borchetta, in 2005 and moved to Universal Music Group in November 2018 in a deal ensuring she maintained the rights to her work.
When Braun acquired her masters, Swift said she was âsadâ and âgrossed outâ and accused the 43-year-old of being behind âincessant, manipulative bullyingâ.
Braun sold the recordings to Shamrock Capital in 2020 and reports in the US suggested the deal was worth more than $300m (about âŹ269m).
Swift said before negotiations could start, Braunâs team wanted her to sign an âironclad NDA stating I would never say another wordâ about him âunless it was positiveâ.
She said at the time: âSo I would have to sign a document that would silence me forever before I could even have a chance to bid on my own work.
âMy legal team said that this is absolutely not normal, and theyâve never seen an NDA like this presented unless it was to silence an assault accuser by paying them off.â
It was at this stage she confirmed she had begun the process of re-recording her old music, in a bid to gain control, saying âit has already proven to be both exciting and creatively fulfillingâ.
A master recording is the original recording of a song and whoever owns it earns revenue through avenues including streaming and use in TV, film and adverts.