Fortune's Fool
Edgar Bronfman, Jr., Warner Music, and an Industry in Crisis
Fred Goodman(Author)
Scribner (Publisher)
Published on 13. July 2010
Book
Hardback
336 pages
978-0-7432-6998-8 (ISBN)
Description
Fortune's Fool tells the story of how the music industry has met its worst crisis, the Internet Age. When Edgar Bronfman, Jr, bought Warner Music Group from Time Warner, his track record consisted of dissembling the family business, Seagram. The resulting Universal-vivendi deal collapsed in less than two years, taking much of the Bronfman fortune with it.
When he and his equity partners bought Warner, they turned a profit in just 14 months, but their problems, like those of the business as a whole, were just beginning.
As soon as Edgar Jr. went to work at Seagram, he began move the company into entertainment business, financed by his sale of Seagram's 150 million shares of Dupont. That decision ruptured the board and the Seagram family, ended the 75 year history of Seagram. When Edgar Jr bought MCA from Masushita and then merged disastrously with Vivendi, and lost $3 billion, the failure nearly ended his business career.
But in the fall-out of the Time/AOL merger, Bronfman was able to rescue the once storied Warner Record Group and reinvent its flagging Atlantic Records as the industry's most successful Internet label. At the same time, CD retailers were disappearing, and though Warner made aggressive deals with technology companies, there was no workable mass solution. By 2007 Warner's stock, which once traded at $30, was at $7 and falling. With access to not only Bronfman, but all the major players, Fred Goodman shows through this revelatory history and analysis that the labels' long strategy of rewarding chart success and market share turned out to be innately destructive when it came time transform the business model. Edgar Jr , the Warner labels and the industry face a final challenge from the Internet that will either save them or make them extinct: developing a recording product or service that is superior to what is already available for free.
When he and his equity partners bought Warner, they turned a profit in just 14 months, but their problems, like those of the business as a whole, were just beginning.
As soon as Edgar Jr. went to work at Seagram, he began move the company into entertainment business, financed by his sale of Seagram's 150 million shares of Dupont. That decision ruptured the board and the Seagram family, ended the 75 year history of Seagram. When Edgar Jr bought MCA from Masushita and then merged disastrously with Vivendi, and lost $3 billion, the failure nearly ended his business career.
But in the fall-out of the Time/AOL merger, Bronfman was able to rescue the once storied Warner Record Group and reinvent its flagging Atlantic Records as the industry's most successful Internet label. At the same time, CD retailers were disappearing, and though Warner made aggressive deals with technology companies, there was no workable mass solution. By 2007 Warner's stock, which once traded at $30, was at $7 and falling. With access to not only Bronfman, but all the major players, Fred Goodman shows through this revelatory history and analysis that the labels' long strategy of rewarding chart success and market share turned out to be innately destructive when it came time transform the business model. Edgar Jr , the Warner labels and the industry face a final challenge from the Internet that will either save them or make them extinct: developing a recording product or service that is superior to what is already available for free.
Reviews / Votes
"Fortune's Fool is a worthy follow-up to Goodman's classic, The Mansion on the Hill, and confirms his reputation as one of the most incisive observers of the music business."--Peter Biskind, author of Easy Riders, Raging Bulls and Star: How Warren Beatty Seduced Hollywood "The compellingly told story of the Seagram heir's music-business adventures at Universal and Warner Music, and what went terribly wrong....Deftly balanced and well-sourced-one of the most solid music-biz bios in recent memory."
--Kirkus Reviews "Deeply researched, engagingly written... Mr. Goodman is clearly persuaded that Mr. Bronfman is savvier than most of his music-industry peers... The music industry's radical trajectory over roughly the past 25 years [is] neatly traced by Mr. Goodman... The woes of the music business have been chronicled elsewhere, but Mr. Goodman keeps things lively with fresh anecdotes."
--The Wall Street Journal "His book is full of colorful anecdotes and astonishing quotes from his subjects ... Fortune's Fool is a great read."
--Devin Leonard, The New York Times "An insider's perspective on an industry in flux."
--Flagpole
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Simon & Schuster
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
513 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7432-6998-8 (9780743269988)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
07/2010
1st Edition
Scribner
€15.81
Available for download