After 15 years of infighting, James Brown's estate is sold

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After 15 years of infighting, James Brown's estate is sold
James Brown performs at the Roosevelt Raceway in Westbury, N.Y., Aug. 12, 1972. Primary Wave Music, a New York company that specializes in marketing estates and song catalogs, is buying the assets of the Brown estate, including music rights, real estate and the control over Brown’s name and likeness. Meyer Liebowitz/The New York Times.

by Ben Sisario and Steve Knopper



NEW YORK, NY.- Since James Brown’s death 15 years ago, a plan by the soul- and funk-music icon to leave the bulk of his estate to scholarships for needy children has been delayed by torrents of litigation. But the mission of financing those scholarships has taken a major step forward under the terms of a new business deal.

Primary Wave Music, a New York company that specializes in marketing estates and song catalogs, is buying the assets of the Brown estate, including music rights, real estate, and the control over Brown’s name and likeness.

Larry Mestel — founder of Primary Wave, which did a similar deal for half of Whitney Houston’s estate and owns the largest interest in Prince’s — envisions an array of new projects to honor Brown’s legacy and promote his music to new generations of fans. Those may include a Broadway musical, television shows and the creation of a Graceland-like museum attraction at Brown’s mansion in South Carolina, he said.

“James Brown was one of the greatest musical entertainers of all time, and one of the greatest legends of the music business,” Mestel said in an interview. “That fits what we do like a glove.”

The price of the deal was not disclosed, but it is estimated at about $90 million. The money from the transaction will be used to endow the Brown scholarship trust “in perpetuity,” said Russell Bauknight, a public accountant who has served as the estate’s personal representative, or executor, since 2009. He said that once the estate is closed, he will continue to work with Primary Wave as a member of a board handling some of Brown’s assets.

“It’s time to bring in someone of Larry’s expertise to take it to the next level,” Bauknight said. “We’re looking at this as more of a partnership moving forward.”

The deal includes a provision for Primary Wave to contribute what Mestel called a “small percentage” of some future deals to the scholarships, which are for underprivileged children in South Carolina, where Brown was born, and Georgia, where he grew up.

The Primary Wave deal is a major move toward realizing Brown’s dream of financing the scholarships, a dream delayed by one of the longest and most contentious estate conflicts in entertainment. The infighting has encompassed numerous lawsuits in state and federal courts, costing millions of dollars in legal fees and leaving a convoluted public record.

“As big a tangle as you’ve ever seen,” Henry McMaster, now South Carolina’s governor, told The New York Times in 2014, seven years after he became involved in the Brown estate as the state’s attorney general.

One part of that tangle involved Tommie Rae Hynie, a singer whom Brown wed in 2001 but later learned was already married to another man. Even with her spousal status unclear, Hynie, along with five of Brown’s children, tried after Brown’s death to set aside his will and negotiate a settlement to give themselves significant shares of the estate.

They found a sympathetic attorney general in McMaster and a state judge who approved their agreement in 2009 — until South Carolina’s Supreme Court struck their settlement down four years later, calling it a “dismemberment of Brown’s carefully crafted estate plan.” (In 2020, that court ruled unanimously that Hynie was not Brown’s wife.)




For more than a decade, Brown’s heirs and estate administrators, including Bauknight and Adele Pope, a former executor, have battled in court over the value of his estate. Bauknight estimated it at about $5 million, but Pope, who was removed from her position in 2009, put it at $84 million. Asked if the recent sale had not supported Pope’s valuation, Bauknight defended it as accurate at the time of Brown’s death. He added that the value of the estate had grown over the years, and he cited the efforts of industry professionals he had hired to advise him.

The deal with Primary Wave has been in the works for nearly four years, and Bauknight said he had discussions with “a number of players.” Terms of the settlement are confidential, but Bauknight said the only beneficiaries of the estate are two trusts for education — one for Brown’s grandchildren, limited at about $2 million, and the other for needy children in South Carolina and Georgia, which was to receive the bulk of Brown’s estate — and the estate is not a party to Brown’s “termination rights,” or reclaimed songwriting copyrights.

To negotiate the acquisition of Brown’s estate, Mestel enlisted one of music’s legal heavyweights, John Branca, who was Michael Jackson’s longtime lawyer and is one of the executors of Jackson’s estate.

“It was complicated,” Branca said of the deal, “because James Brown was complicated.”

Primary Wave’s transaction leaves unresolved a long-standing legal fight between Bauknight and Pope, who have each accused the other of trying to profit from the estate.

Their outstanding cases — one by Pope against the estate, the other filed against her by Bauknight and others — are under appeal. Until they are decided or settled, the scholarships cannot be paid, Bauknight said.

Dylan Malagrinò, a professor at the Charleston School of Law in South Carolina, said that any claim against the estate “has to be resolved before you can start distributing money. It freezes everything.”

Bauknight said he hoped that the first scholarships would be awarded by the end of next year. A lawyer for Pope declined to comment.

For Primary Wave, the deal is the latest in what has become a highly competitive market for hit music catalogs and artist estates. Its competitors include Hipgnosis Songs Fund, which has bought rights in music by Neil Young, Fleetwood Mac and others, as well as the major music conglomerates — which have acquired Bob Dylan’s and Paul Simon’s catalogs — and a new wave of private equity giants that are pouring billions of dollars into new deals.

Mestel said that Primary Wave’s advantage is expertise in marketing and branding. For the Houston estate, for example, the company is involved in a hologram tour, a cosmetics line, a biopic and a Broadway show.

The company, he said, has about $1.8 billion in assets and a “war chest” of $1 billion in cash to announce new deals. Lately, it has been announcing transactions almost weekly, including deals with the estates of Bing Crosby, Luther Vandross and Teddy Pendergrass, and for the music of Jeff Porcaro of Toto.

“While other investment firms have announced billions they’ve raised,” Mestel said, “we’re announcing billions of deals we’re closing.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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