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Adele, the Grammy award-winning artist, has joined the list of music superstars investing in Audoo, a music technology company which helps artists to receive fairer royalty payments.
Sky News has learnt that the British musician and Adam Clayton, the U2 bassist, have injected money into Audoo as part of a £7m funding round. The pair join Sir Elton John, Sir Paul McCartney and ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus as shareholders in the company.
Changes to Audoo's share register were filed at Companies House in recent days. Audoo, which was established by former musician Ryan Edwards, is trying to address the perennial issue of public performance royalties, in order to ensure musicians are rewarded when their work is played in public venues.
Mr Edwards is reported to have been motivated to set up the company after hearing his own music played at football stadia and in bars, without any payment for it. Estimates suggest that artists lose out on billions of dollars of unaccounted royalties each year.
London-based Audoo uses a monitoring device - which it calls an Audio Meter - to recognise songs played in public venues, and which is said to have a 99% success rate. It has struck what it describes as industry-first partnerships with organisations including the music licensing company PPL/PRS to track and report songs played in public performance locations such as cafes, hair salons, shops and gyms.
"At Audoo, we're incredibly proud of the continued support we're receiving as we work to make music royalties fairer and more transparent for artists and rights-holders around the world through our pioneering technology," Mr Edwards told Sky News in a statement on Friday. "We have successfully reached £7m in our latest funding round.
"This funding marks a pivotal moment for Audoo as we focus on our growth in North America and across Europe, bringing us closer to our mission of revolutionising the global royalty landscape." Sources said the new capital would be used partly to finance Audoo's growth in the US. The latest funding round takes the total amount of money raised by the company since its launch to more than $30m.
Mr Edwards has spoken of his desire to establish a major presence in Europe and the US because of their status as the world's biggest recorded music markets. Adele's management company did not respond to an enquiry from Sky News..