Electronic dance music is big business today, and today SFX Entertainment, a producer of live events and other electronic dance music content is making a big consolidation move to cement its position within it. It is buying three startups — Arc90 (maker of the Readability app), marketing agency Fame House and music commerce platform Tunezy — to beef up its offerings online. The terms of the deal have not been disclosed; we’ll update if we can find out.
The string of deals follows the company’s acquisition of Beatport earlier this year.
The three companies and their teams are joining SFX to become the company’s platform team, with Arc90 founder Richard Ziade coming on as the company’s new chief product officer, he said in a blog post today.
“Arc90, Fame House and Tunezy are leaders in each of their fields and bring extraordinary talent to SFX,” said Robert F.X. Sillerman, Chairman and CEO of SFX Entertainment, in a statement. “These deals are consistent with our commitment to bring [electronic music culture] fans around the world more of what they love, 365-days-a-year, and to be world-class in all our areas of focus.”
Arc90′s possibly most visible product was Readability, which was an early project that also involved Marco Arment before he went on to start Instapaper. Arc90 has also worked with a number of clients to develop web and mobile apps behind the scenes, and that is how it was first introduced to SFX. Another Arc90 product was Kindling, a collaboration tool for businesses. With services like Instapaper and Flipboard taking off with consumers, it’s been hard for others to compete, and you can see how consolidating with a larger publisher might make sense for the company. Ziade says that both Kindling and Readability will continue to live as separate products, with an update for Readability coming soon.
As for Tunezy, the Canada-based startup had raised an undisclosed round with Interntainment Media. With platforms like Spotify and iTunes increasingly cornering the respective streaming and download markets, it’s hard for smaller music players to get a look in. Tunezy was built as a route for independent musicians to connect and sell music to fans, and it says it has some 10 million fans connected to artists that use its platform, but in a game of scale even this may have been too uphill a struggle.
This is where SFX may be able to come in handy. EDM (or EMC as SFX calls it) has largely bucked the trend in music today of diminishing returns on music sales. With a very heavy focus on paying for live events that revolve around star DJs, it’s become a huge money spinner — something that a recent article in the New Yorker pointed out is grossing even more than gambling at the casinos that have gone all-in on their EDM offerings.
There will be some of this coming through more in the digital space, it seems. “The DNA of Arc90 is to challenge convention and innovate,” said Arc90 CEO Rich Ziade.”We’re incredibly excited to contribute to the direction and stewardship of the digital experiences that will color so much of electronic music culture in the future. With SFX, we found a shared commitment to innovation and experimentation.”
The acquisitions are expected to close in November 2013.
Image: flickr
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