The Wall Street Journal

Bruce Springsteen’s sale of music rights to Sony believed to be worth as much as $600 million

Sony has been the Boss’s record label for his entire career

Bruce Springsteen performs in September at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum in Manhattan.

Getty Images/Ed JONES/various sources/AFP

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Bruce Springsteen sold his music rights to Sony Music Group for between $500 million and $600 million in a deal representing the largest transaction ever for the life’s work of an individual artist, according to people familiar with the matter.

From the archives (February 2021): Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen launch podcast series on Spotify

Various financial players looked at backing the transaction, according to people familiar with the deal, with private investment firm Eldridge Industries LLC putting up a portion of the funds for part of the deal, yet another financial player to make a big move in the frothy market for music copyrights. Sony Music Group is a division of Japanese conglomerate Sony Group Corp. 6758, -1.35%   SONY, -1.32%.

At a rally in Madison, WI, on the final day of campaigning, Bruce Springsteen entertained the crowd while they waited for President Obama to arrive. WSJ's Laura Meckler reports via #WorldStream.

The deal gives Sony, the second largest music label company and largest music publisher, ownership of classic hits including “Born to Run,” “Born in the U.S.A.” and “Dancing in the Dark.” Sony said its publishing arm partnered with Eldridge on the purchase of Springsteen’s songwriting catalog.

The approximately $500 million valuation represents more than 30 times the annual royalties on the combined recorded music and songwriting catalog—an aggressive bid that kept Springsteen’s camp in exclusive talks with Sony instead of looking for a buyer on the open market, according to the people. Sony has been the Boss’s record label home for his entire career.

An expanded version of this report appears at WSJ.com.

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