stayc main image

Hitmakers on Netflix: The Songwriting Show Everyone’s Talking About

July 27, 2025

There's a new voice in music reality, and it's about creating rather than competing. Hitmakers, a six-episode documentary series that follows 12 elite composers and producers as they work together...

Read more
stayc main image

JUST DROPPED! Miley Cyrus & Spotify Team Up for Exclusive Release ‘Billions Club Live With Miley Cyrus: A Concert Film’

July 27, 2025

Miley Cyrus performs an acoustic rendition of "Flowers" in her new EP.‍Spotify just gave Miley Cyrus fans the ultimate gift. The streaming platform has released...

Read more
stayc main image

Musicians Push Back on Dwindling Payments from Streaming Services

July 27, 2025

The rise of streaming platforms has fundamentally reshaped the music industry, offering convenience and accessibility to millions of listeners. However, for many musicians, the rapid growth of...

Read more
stayc main image

Olivia Rodrigo & Gracie Abrams Speak Out Against Starvation Crisis in Gaza: "We Can’t Stay Silent"

July 27, 2025

Olivia Rodrigo and Gracie Abrams are using their massive platforms to amplify the voices of those suffering in Gaza, where children are facing severe malnutrition due to the prolonged Israel-Hamas...

Read more
stayc main image

Canadian musicians remember Ozzy Osbourne

July 23, 2025

Following the news of Ozzy Osbourne’s passing, Canadian musicians have come forward with emotional tributes to the legendary "Prince of Darkness." Known for his pioneering work with Black Sabbath...

Read more
stayc main image

Demi's Long-Awaited Comeback with New Album Giving 'Main Character High-Energy Dance’

July 23, 2025

After famously holding a "funeral" for her pop sound in 2022, Demi Lovato is officially resurrecting her mainstream roots—with a pulsating dance-pop album that promises to be her "most celebratory"...

Read more
stayc main image

(New Update) Tragedy at Tomorrowland 2025: Woman Dies After Falling!

July 23, 2025

A 35-year-old Canadian woman has died after falling ill during the opening day of Tomorrowland 2025 in Boom, Belgium. The festival, already reeling from a massive main stage fire just days before...

Read more
stayc main image

When a Band That Never Existed Hits 1 Million Spotify Streams — Is Anyone Listening?

July 23, 2025

Consider Billie Eilish as a synthetic voice rather than the genuine one. Spotify recently entered the world of Velvet Sundown, a full AI project including music, graphics, and an algorithmically...

Read more
stayc main image

Resident blocks Beatles fans from Harrison's home

July 23, 2025

In a move to regain some peace and privacy, residents of Arnold Grove in Liverpool have put up a chain across their street, blocking access to the birthplace of Beatles legend George Harrison...

Read more
stayc main image

Pink Floyd Sells Their Rights to Sony and It’s the End of an Era

July 23, 2025

The legendary band that soundtracked a generation has officially handed over the keysThere are bands that make hits, and then there are bands that change the fabric of music forever. Pink Floyd has...

Read more
stayc main image

Red Velvet in North Korea: The K-pop Performance That Crossed the Border

July 23, 2025

When five women did what decades of politics couldn’t, bring two Koreas a little closerThere’s performing for fans, then there’s performing for history.In 2018, Red Velvet, one of K-pop’s most...

Read more
stayc main image

BLACKPINK at Coachella: The Moment That Made America Blink

July 23, 2025

When four girls from South Korea turned the California desert into a global stageThere are music moments… and then there are cultural reset moments. BLACKPINK performing at Coachella? Yeah. That...

Read more

Pink Floyd Sells Their Rights to Sony and It’s the End of an Era

stayc main image

The legendary band that soundtracked a generation has officially handed over the keys

There are bands that make hits, and then there are bands that change the fabric of music forever. Pink Floyd has always been the latter. Their music wasn’t just played, it was felt. It built universes. It bent reality. And for so many, it became the background to life’s biggest moments.

Now, after decades of holding onto their iconic legacy, Pink Floyd has reportedly sold the rights to their music catalog to Sony Music, marking one of the biggest music rights deals in history.

It’s the end of a chapter. And for some fans, it’s a little emotional.

What’s Actually Happening?

In the ever-growing trend of legacy artists selling their catalogs, Pink Floyd is the latest and arguably one of the most monumental to make that move. The deal reportedly gives Sony ownership over the band’s master recordings, publishing rights, and possibly merchandising and branding.

That means everything, from The Dark Side of the Moon to Wish You Were Here, is now under Sony’s roof. Every haunting chord, every otherworldly synth, every lyric that made you question the meaning of time and existence, it’s all been sold.

And yeah, it’s a lot to process.

Why Now?

There’s no single reason, but if we’re being honest, time is catching up to everyone, even rock gods.

Selling a catalog is often about legacy and control. It’s about ensuring the music survives, remains relevant, and keeps bringing in revenue in a new era of streaming, TikTok trends, and sync licensing for movies and shows.

It could also be about peace. About letting go. About handing off a body of work that’s been carried for over 50 years. Because at a certain point, the art becomes bigger than the artist, and it needs a home that can handle the weight of that responsibility.

What This Means for Fans

Let’s be real, this doesn’t change how the music sounds. Comfortably Numb still hits. Time still makes you reflect on your mortality at 2 a.m. Money still slaps in a capitalist-critique kind of way.

But it does change something deeper: the feeling of ownership. Of intimacy. Knowing that Pink Floyd’s music was theirs, raw, unfiltered, and untouched by corporate hands, was part of the magic.

Now, there’s a layer between the art and the audience. And that stings a little.

Still, if handled right, this could also mean a new era of remasters, unreleased material, and wider access to their catalog. More people are discovering their music. More moments soundtracked by that signature Floyd sound.

A Shift That Reflects a Bigger Trend

Pink Floyd isn’t alone. In the past few years, artists like Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Nicks, and Justin Bieber have sold their catalogs for jaw-dropping sums. It’s part of a larger shift in the music industry, where rights are as valuable as gold, and legacy is treated like an investment portfolio.

It’s business, yes. But it’s also about legacy-building on a massive scale.

And if anyone’s legacy deserves to echo forever, it’s Pink Floyd’s.

So, What Should You Do With This Info?

Honestly? Go listen.

Not out of nostalgia, but out of reverence. Whether you’re discovering them for the first time or revisiting your favorite tracks, keep the music alive. Play Shine On You Crazy Diamond. Watch The Wall. Dive into their lyrics like they’re sacred texts.

Because whether Sony owns the rights or not, you own the experience. That’s something no deal can ever take away.

Pink Floyd Sells Their Rights to Sony and It’s the End of an Erapink-floyd-sells-their-rights-to-sony-and-its-the-end-of-an-eraNazia RahmanJul 23, 2025The legendary band that soundtracked a generation has officially handed over the keysThere are bands that make hits, and then there are bands that change the fabric of music forever. Pink Floyd has...