The online missive from Swift, one of the most successful and strategic pop stars of her generation, concerned the ownership of her master recordings â including all six of her multiplatinum albums â which are controlled by Nashville-based record company Big Machine. The Big Machine Label Group, which includes multiple labels, announced Sunday that it was being acquired by Scooter Braun, the powerful manager behind Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande, and his company Ithaca Holdings. Braun has also represented rapper Kanye West, a longtime rival of Swiftâs.
Swift, in her note, addressed both Braun â accusing him of years of âincessant, manipulative bullyingâ related to her tiffs with West â and Big Machine founder Scott Borchetta, who she said refused to sell her control of her masters.
In November, Swift left Big Machine, her first and, until that point, only label, and signed a multiyear, multialbum agreement with Universal Music Group and its subsidiary, Republic Records, with the singer owning her master recordings moving forward.
âFor years I asked, pleaded for a chance to own my work,â Swift wrote on Sunday. âInstead I was given an opportunity to sign back up to Big Machine Records and âearnâ one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in. I walked away because I knew once I signed that contract, Scott Borchetta would sell the label, thereby selling me and my future.â
Swift added: âNow Scooter has stripped me of my lifeâs work, that I wasnât given an opportunity to buy. Essentially, my musical legacy is about to lie in the hands of someone who tried to dismantle it.â She cited Braunâs involvement with West around the time when the rapper and his wife, Kim Kardashian West, released a partial recording of a phone call that they said showed her agreeing to appear in Westâs lyrics, as well as when West released a music video that included a Swift likeness naked in bed.
âThis is my worst case scenario,â Swift wrote. âAny time Scott Borchetta has heard the words âScooter Braunâ escape my lips, it was when I was either crying or trying not to. He knew what he was doing; they both did. Controlling a woman who didnât want to be associated with them. In perpetuity.â
She illustrated her message with an Instagram post by Bieber â captioned âTaylor swift what upâ â that shows him on a video call with Braun and West. Swift added in her own caption: âThis is Scooter Braun, bullying me on social media when I was at my lowest point,â adding, âHeâs about to own all the music Iâve ever made.â
Representatives for Braun and Borchetta declined to comment.
Ithaca Holdings, which includes Braunâs companies in music, television, film and tech, announced Sunday that it had bought Big Machine Label Group, which, in addition to Swiftâs music, is home to country artists like Florida Georgia Line, Rascal Flatts and Thomas Rhett. The Wall Street Journal, which first reported news of the sale, put the price at more than $300 million.
âHeâs built a brilliant company full of iconic songs and artists,â Braun said in a statement about the sale. âWho wouldnât want to be a part of that?â
Gossip about a possible sale of Big Machine, which was founded in 2005, had been buzzing through the industry for years. In 2015, Big Machine was seeking a deal that would have valued the company at up to $250 million, and attracted interest from not only major music labels but also tech players like Snapchat. Borchetta ultimately pulled out of that sale and renewed his companyâs distribution deal with Universal Music Group.
Last year, as news circulated that Swiftâs contract was ending, Big Machine again became a hot property. But this time it was seeking up to $350 million, a sign of the boost in value that many music catalogs have gotten from streaming. Universal was a possible suitor, but withdrew early on; the company signed Swift to her own new deal.
Borchetta reportedly owned 60% of Big Machine, with minority positions owned by country artist Toby Keith and Taylor Swiftâs father, Scott Swift, a former Merrill Lynch stockbroker.
Taylor Swift, who signed with Big Machine at age 15, has sold more than 40 million albums on the label, in addition to releasing more than 40 platinum singles. According to a report last year in Billboard, sales and streams of Taylor Swiftâs music made up almost 35% of the Big Label Machine Groupâs market share.
âThis is what happens when you sign a deal at fifteen to someone for whom the term âloyaltyâ is clearly just a contractual concept,â Swift wrote Sunday.
As part of the deal, Borchetta will join Ithacaâs board and remain president and chief executive of Big Machine. Ithaca also announced that the private-equity firm Carlyle Group would make an additional investment in the company, remaining a minority shareholder in Ithaca.
Swift, 29, has made something of a habit of expressing her displeasure in public. In addition to her yearslong feud with West, which she addressed in song and onstage at the Grammys, she has taken tech giants like Apple and Spotify to task for what she claimed were unfair business terms for artists and songwriters. (She went on to collaborate with both companies.)
In concluding her note Sunday, Swift plugged her upcoming seventh album: âI will always be proud of my past work,â she wrote. âBut for a healthier option, âLoverâ will be out August 23.â
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.