Taylor Swift and Scooter Braun’s Feud: A Timeline

Taylor Swift and Scooter Braun’s Feud: A Timeline


Contents
June 30, 2019: Braun acquires Big Machine Label Group for over $300 millionJune 30, 2019: Swift responds via passionate Tumblr postJune 30, 2019: Borchetta responds to Swift with his own letterJune 30, 2019: Justin Bieber calls Swift out as fellow stars pick sidesJune 30, 2019: Halsey, Todrick Hall and Joseph Kahn stand with SwiftJune 30, 2019: Yael Cohen defends her husbandJuly 2, 2019: Swift’s attorney speaks outAug. 23, 2019: Braun congratulates Swift on “brilliant” album LoverAug. 25, 2019: Swift announce plan to re-record her old albumsNov. 15, 2019: Swift alleges Braun and Borchetta are “exercising tyrannical control” over her musicNov. 15, 2019: Big Machine Label Group responds, denying the allegationsNov. 15, 2019: Celebs take Swift’s side once againNov. 15, 2019: Swift’s rep hits back, claims Big Machine owns singer $7.9 million in unpaid royaltiesNov. 18 2019: Swift gets gets green light from Big Machine to perform old songs at AMAsNov. 22, 2019: Braun says he’s received “numerous death threats”Dec. 11, 2019: Swift discusses re-recording her songs with BillboardDec. 12, 2019: Swift addresses the dispute at Billboard‘s Women in Music eventFeb. 28, 2020: Billboard estimates that the price of Swift’s first six albums has doubled since Braun acquired themApril 23, 2020: Big Machine Records plans Live From Clear Channel Stripped 2008 album, Swift disapprovesSept. 18, 2020: Ye steps inNov. 1, 2020: Swift is officially “free” to re-record her first five albumsNov. 16, 2020: Swift’s masters are sold againApril 9, 2021: Swift drops Fearless (Taylor’s Version)June 23, 2021: Braun expresses “regret” over Swift’s reaction to his acquisitionNov. 12, 2021: Swift drops Red (Taylor’s Version)April 27, 2022: Braun speaks out, says he disagrees with artists “weaponizing a fanbase”Sept. 27, 2022: Braun reveals the “important lesson” he learned from Swift debacleJuly 7, 2023: Swift drops Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)Oct. 27, 2023: Swift drops 1989 (Taylor’s Version)Dec. 6, 2023: Swift says Braun wanted her masters for “nefarious reasons”Aug. 27, 2024: Braun jokes about Swift’s summer vacationSept. 15, 2024: Braun responds to Donald Trump’s “I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT” postMay 30, 2025: Swift buys back her mastersThe Daily

The mogul purchased the pop star’s six-album catalog for upwards of $300 million in 2019.

When Taylor Swift first slammed Scooter Braun in a Tumblr post heard ’round the world, nobody was prepared for one of the biggest feuds in music history to unfold over the coming months — much less the reverberations it would cause in the industry for years afterward.

Though officially beginning in 2019 — when the pop star first put former label boss Scott Borchetta on blast for selling her catalog to the SB Projects founder — the story actually starts over a decade prior, when Swift was simply a 15-year-old aspiring singer-songwriter. In 2005, she inked her first record deal with then-new Nashville company Big Machine Records, signing over the ownership of her first six studio albums’ masters.

Thirteen years later, Swift wanted out. After her deal with Big Machine ended, the Grammy winner signed a new contract with Republic Records in 2018. And though she made sure to thank Borchetta “for guiding me through over a decade of work that I will always be so proud of” in an Instagram post announcing the transfer, Swift also made a pointed allusion to why she’d decided to leave: “It’s also incredibly exciting to know that I’ll own all of my master recordings that I make from now on. It’s really important to me to see eye to eye with a label regarding the future of our industry.”

It would only take a few months for the diplomacy to end, with Borchetta selling Big Machine — including Swift’s catalog — for upwards of $300 million in June 2019. On the same day, the “Shake It Off” singer came forward with a scathing statement taking issue not just with her former business partner for selling her work to someone else, but to whom exactly he’d sold it: Braun. As it turned out, Swift wasn’t exactly a fan of the music manager — who is known for representing Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande and more — and their subsequent feud would go down in history books and inspire ongoing conversations about artist rights, private equity and the value of re-releasing music for years to come.

From Braun’s fateful purchase to Swift’s Taylor’s Version re-recording project and the star finally purchasing her masters back, a lot has happened in the clash of these two music industry titans. Keep reading to see a detailed timeline of how everything played out below.




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