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Jonas Brothers' dad Kevin Sr buys rights to part of band's music catalogue

Jonas Brothers' dad Kevin Sr buys rights to part of band's music catalogue

Perth Now5 days ago
The Jonas Brothers' father has bought the rights to part of his sons' back catalogue.
Kevin Jonas Sr. has reached a deal with his sons Nick, Joe and Kevin via his own talent management company Jonas Group Entertainment Holdings, which gives him the publishing and recording rights to the trio's The Happiness Begins, 2023's The Album, and their upcoming LP Greetings From Your Hometown, plus standalone singles Remember This and Like It's Christmas.
As reported by Billboard, he told his sons: "I don't know that anybody can love your music any more than I do or be any more proud of you.
'I am not asking for less than the purchase price but for consideration of the passion I'll bring to keeping your legacy thriving.'
In a statement, the siblings praised Jonas Group Publishing president Leslie DiPiero for supporting "songwriters and creators".
They said: "We are passionate about songwriting and the creative process, and Leslie DiPiero [Jonas Group Publishing president] has always been a true champion for songwriters and creators.
'We look forward to working with her and the team.'
Kevin Sr. added that considering the family connection - and his past experience managing the trio with Phil McIntyre early in their career - working together again should be "easy".
The exact financial terms of the deal have not been disclosed.
However, Jonas Brothers still have ownership of their first four albums - It's About Time, their self-titled album, A Little Bit Longer, and Lines, Vines and Trying Times.
The debut was released on Columbia Records, while the other three were on Disney's Hollywood Records.
Speaking after parting ways with Disney and retaining their masters, Nick said at the time: "This was a decision that we made as a group. Naturally, as with any partnership, when you do part ways, there is emotion tied to it.
"We've been blessed to have a lot of success with Hollywood and with Disney, but speaking on behalf of my brothers and our team, we're all looking forward to this next chapter.
"We're ready for that next step as a group, and being able to take our work with us was so important.'
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There's been an exciting trend in low-budget horror movies recently when iconic intellectual property, usually the ones associated with sweetness, hits that magic number where it enters into the public domain. Like the 2023 film Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, where Christopher Robin has neglected his animal friends after leaving for college and so they go on a killing rampage. These twisted Winnie films - there's been a bunch of spin-offs and also-rans in the past two years - arrived on the scene just as AA Milne's original book, published in 1926, passed the 95-year mark required for the US public domain. 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But, as in all good fairy tales, the taxi ride to Granny's house is interrupted, not by a wolf, but by an enormous set of antlers smashing into the taxi head-on. The taxi driver is killed as the giant deer, feral with razor sharp teeth that drip blood, stomps the car's cabin, and Xana and Benji escape, running to Granny's house. But Granny has dementia and in her vague moments, seems to be psychically linked to the deer, and it turns out there's a strong family link to the beast and the reason it is haunting the woods and the humans, any humans, it sees as being destroyers. Dan Allen and Rhys Warrington's film is fun, if you like horror, but it's not the tongue-in-cheek horror that usually hits the multiplex cinemas. Bambi doesn't throw off witty one-liners as he despatches his prey, it is kill-and-move-on. 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These twisted Winnie films - there's been a bunch of spin-offs and also-rans in the past two years - arrived on the scene just as AA Milne's original book, published in 1926, passed the 95-year mark required for the US public domain. The juggernaut that is Disney couldn't stop enterprising filmmakers jumping on this adaptation bandwagon when Steamboat Willie, the first on-screen appearance of Mickey Mouse, entered public domain in 2014, with recent horror films like Mickey's Slayhouse and Mouseboat Massacre hitting - well, they're not hitting cinemas, they're mostly appearing on horror streaming services like Shudder. Even my childhood favourite TV show characters The Banana Splits went on a malfunctioning animatronic killing spree in 2019's The Banana Splits Movie. 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