When the largest concert promoter in the country was known as Clear Channel Entertainment, a division of Clear Channel Communications, it caused its corporate parent a whole lot of headaches, due to ill-timed notions of advertising "synergy," which instead sparked a public uproar. But as a free-standing public company since 2005, known as Live Nation, it has made a remarkable series of deals in a short period of time, all of which suggest the future of the music business may be far rosier than the scenario currently being presented by the imploding major recording labels.
Live Nation's latest coup, an expected deal with Jay-Z valued at around $150 million, according to the New York Times, includes financial backing for Jay-Z's own entertainment company, as well as recordings and tours over the next ten years. Should the deal come to pass, it will eclipse the scope of two previous Live Nation headline-making maneuvers with Madonna and U2--and could provide sweet vindication for the Mays family, recently navigating extremely stormy waters in their attempt to bring the publicly owned radio giant Clear Channel Communications private.
While Live Nation's executive team does not include a Mays, its board of directors includes Clear Channel chairman Lowry Mays; his son, Randall, who is Clear Channel's CFO; and a daughter of Clear Channel cofounder B.J. "Red" McCombs.
Certainly it would be an astonishing coda to the Clear Channel story if the company blamed--rightly or wrongly--for the cultural decline of radio in some way seeded a company that became a key innovator and savior of the music business.