The 29-year-old appealed to her 85 million followers on Twitter
to express their support for her in an ongoing row over the
ownership of her songs, and accused the executives of exercising
"tyrannical control" over her music.
The comments followed news that she was to receive the "Artist
of the Decade" prize at the American Music Awards ceremony later
this year.
Swift said she had planned to perform a medley of her hits on
the show.
"They claim that would be re-recording my music before I'm
allowed to next year," Swift said in her Twitter post.
The executives, whom Swift identified as Scott Borchetta and
Scooter Braun, had also refused the use of older music or
performance footage for a documentary being made by Netflix
about her life, she added.
"The message being sent to me is very clear," Swift said.
"Basically be a good little girl and shut up. Or you'll be
punished."
Borchetta and Braun could not immediately be reached for comment
outside of U.S. office hours.
[to top of second column] |
Braun, who represents Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande among others,
this year acquired Big Machine Label Group, the Nashville-based
record company founded by Borchetta that owns the master recordings
of Swift's past songs.
Swift signed with Big Machine at age 15 and left last November for
Universal Music Group, a unit of French conglomerate Vivendi, and
released her first album with UMG in August.
"Right now my performance at the AMAs, the Netflix documentary and
any other recorded events I am planning to play until November 2020
are a question mark," she said.
Swift, whose latest album "Lover" has broken records in China,
headlined the opening gala for the Nov. 11 Singles' Day online
shopping festival of retail juggernaut Alibaba, which pulled in a
record $38.4 billion.
(Reporting by Rich McKay; Writing by Clarence Fernandez; Editing by
Mike Collett-White)
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