WITH concerts and festivals continuing to be canceled in the second year of the pandemic, 2021 meant a loss of income for many musicians. Some, of course, still managed to pull through. Rolling Stone magazine recently released its annual list of the highest paid artists over the past 12 months. And the list has a few surprises in store.

Bruce Springsteen is at the top of the list, with revenues estimated by the publication at $590 million. The Boss owes this top spot to the sale of his music rights to Sony for half a billion dollars. This is, to date, a record transaction for a catalog of recorded music and compositions. The income of the American rockstar also took off thanks to the podcast "Renegades: Born in the USA" and the book of the same name that he released with former president Barack Obama.


Jay-Z and Paul Simon follow Bruce Springsteen in the ranking, with estimated earnings of $470 million and $260 million respectively for the year 2021. The rapper amassed a small fortune by selling half of his shares in the Armand de Brignac champagne house to Moët Hennessy. Meanwhile Paul Simon also sold the rights to all the songs in his musical repertoire to Sony Music Publishing.


The lucrative business of selling rights to musical catalogs


Many of the artists appearing in Rolling Stone's list also sold rights to all or part of their music catalog last year. This is the case for Ryan Tedder of OneRepublic (in 5th place) as well as members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers (in 6th) and Mötley Crüe (in 8th). While music repertoire prices began to rise in 2020, they really spiked when artists found themselves without tours and concerts during the pandemic.


Only one woman made it to the top 10 paid artists of the year 2021: Taylor Swift in tenth. The American singer went a different route from many of the artists, not choosing to sell the rights to her catalog. Instead, she released two albums last year, "Red (Taylor's Version)" and "Fearless (Taylor's Version)," and forged commercial partnerships with brands like Peloton and Starbucks.