You Signed Away More Than You Think
You got the deal!
Everyone congratulated you. You celebrated. It felt like the beginning of everything.
But somewhere in those pages you signed, pages most artists never fully read, you gave away things that will take years to get back. If you ever get them back at all.
This is not about blame. This is about what the contract actually said.
Two Deals. Two Different Traps
There are two agreements most African artists encounter early in their careers.
A distribution deal. And a record deal.
They sound different. They are often presented differently. But both of them, in their standard form, are designed to extract maximum value from your music while returning minimum value to you.
Here is what each one actually takes.
The Distribution Deal
Distribution looks simple on the surface.
You give a distributor your music. They put it on Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, and everywhere else. You pay a fee or give them a percentage. Your music reaches the world.
What they do not explain upfront is everything attached to that arrangement.
Most standard distribution agreements claim the right to distribute your music for a fixed term, usually one to three years. Some automatically renew unless you actively cancel. Miss the window, and you are locked in for another cycle.
Some distributors take a percentage of every stream, every download, every sync placement your music generates while it is in their system. Others charge a flat annual fee but bury clauses that give them rights to pitch your music for licensing without your direct approval.
Read the termination clause carefully.
Some agreements make it easy to leave. Others require 30 to 90 days notice, and even after you leave, your music can remain live on platforms for months while revenue continues to flow through their system.
You are not just choosing a delivery service. You are choosing who sits between you and your money.
The Record Deal
This is where it gets serious.
A standard record deal does not just distribute your music. It owns it.
When you sign a traditional record deal, the label typically acquires ownership of the masters, the original recordings of your songs. Not a license. Not a partnership but ownership.
That means every time your song is streamed, played on radio, used in a film, or featured in an ad, the label collects first. You receive whatever royalty rate was written into your contract, which in most standard deals sits between 15 and 20 percent of net revenue after the label recoups its costs.
Recoupment is the word that quietly ends careers.
The label advances you money for recording, marketing, videos, and promotion. That advance is not a gift. It is a loan that comes directly out of your future royalties. Until every cent of that advance is paid back from your earnings (not theirs), you receive nothing beyond your basic living allowance.
Labels can spend aggressively on your campaign. Every dollar they spend goes back on your tab. Artists have sold millions of records and still owed their label money at the end of it.
The 360 Deal
Increasingly, labels, especially those entering African markets, are offering 360 deals.
The name sounds modern. The structure is not in your favour.
A 360 deal gives the label a percentage of every revenue stream you generate. Not just your recordings. Your live performances. Your merchandise. Your brand deals. Your touring income. Your YouTube revenue. Your endorsements.
Everything you build, the label takes a share of.
The justification is that the label is investing in your entire career, not just your music. The reality is that they are inserting themselves into income streams they had no role in creating.
An artist signs a 360 deal at 22 with one album. At 30 they are selling out arenas, moving merchandise globally, and closing major brand partnerships. The label is collecting a percentage of all of it, for work they did nearly a decade ago.
What African Artists Face Specifically
The standard contract problems affect every artist everywhere.
But African artists face additional layers.
Most deals crossing between African artists and international labels or distributors are governed by the laws of foreign jurisdictions, typically the United States or the United Kingdom. Disputes are resolved in courts or arbitration panels thousands of miles away, under legal systems most African artists have no practical access to.
Royalty collection infrastructure in many African markets is underdeveloped. Even when contracts specify that royalties should be collected and remitted, the systems that track and verify those collections are weaker than in Western markets. Money gets lost in the gap between what the platform pays and what the artist receives.
And most critically, African artists often sign without independent legal representation. Not because they are careless. Because access to entertainment lawyers who understand both African music markets and international contract law is limited and expensive.
The label knows exactly what the contract means. The artist is often finding out years later.
What To Do Before You Sign Anything
Get a lawyer. Not a general lawyer. An entertainment lawyer who has read recording and distribution contracts before. This is not optional. This is the most important investment you will make before your music career starts generating real money.
Read the recoupment clause. Understand exactly how much the label or distributor plans to spend on your behalf, and understand that every dollar of that spend comes back out of your royalties first.
Negotiate the term. Every deal has a length. Shorter terms with renewal options protect you. Long-term deals lock you in while someone else controls your music.
Never sign away your publishing without understanding what it means. Your publishing rights, the ownership of your songs as compositions, separate from the recordings, are a second revenue stream entirely. Giving them away is giving away a second income for the life of the copyright.
Ask for an audit clause. This gives you the right to examine the label's or distributor's financial records to verify what they say they are paying you. Legitimate partners have no reason to refuse this.
Build in reversion rights. If the label is not actively promoting or distributing your music, you should have the right to reclaim ownership after a set period of inactivity. Fight for this clause.
The Real Cost
Most artists find out what they signed years after the fact.
When the advance is spent. When the album has run its cycle. When the label moves on to the next artist and yours sits in a catalogue they own and you cannot touch.
The contract was always clear. They just did not explain it.
That is the gap Chaintune exists to close.
Not after the deal but before it.
Because the best negotiation is the one you walk into already knowing what is at stake.
Chaintune Academy