Compilation: investing across multiple music royalties

Compilation: investing across multiple music royalties

With Musicow, a Compilation allows investors to purchase a single security representing interests in multiple songs. This approach provides exposure to several royalty streams within one investment. Revenue from these royalties can fluctuate, and all investments carry risk, including the potential loss of principal. Investors should review offering materials carefully before investing.

What is Compilation?
What is Compilation?
Compilation is a type of Royalty Shares that contains multiple songs often from the same artist, album, or common theme.

These are grouped to offer a balanced exposure to different sounds, stages, and success potentials.
Why it matters
Why it matters
Diversified exposure:
A Compilation security represents interests in multiple songs, providing exposure to several royalty streams within a single investment.
Access to smaller tracks:
By pooling multiple songs, even tracks that might not be offered individually can be included in a single security for investment purposes.
Flexible exploration:
A Compilation security represents interests in multiple songs, providing exposure to several royalty streams within a single investment.
How it works
How it works
Our team groups songs into a Compilation based on factors such as musical coherence, artist activity, and available data on audience engagement. One track may be highlighted as a representative example, while all songs included in the Compilation can be viewed and listened to on the drop detail page. Songs are identified by stage (Early or Long-tail) to provide context about their release lifecycle. For newer songs without royalty history, we provide additional data to support investors in evaluating the offering. All investments carry risk, including the potential loss of principal, and past engagement does not guarantee future royalty revenue.
Ideal for
Ideal for
Fans who want to support up-and-coming artists, explore multiple tracks, or dip their toes into music royalty investing without the pressure of picking a single "hit."