We last wrote about royalty-management startup Mogul in February when it raised a $5m funding round. Now it has become the latest company to launch a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server to play nicely with AI assistants.
In this case, that means giving its artist and manager clients the ability to manage their royalties, distribution and publishing administration tasks from within services including Claude and ChatGPT.
“What once took a label operations team weeks of coordination can now be accomplished in a single conversation,” is the pitch, covering distribution, publishing-registration submissions and other use cases.
“Artists can also run royalty audits to surface uncollected earnings, diagnose revenue drops, compare performances across platforms, pull royalty statements, fix broken source integrations, and manage catalogue metadata.”
Mogul’s launch of an MCP server follows similar moves by music-tech firms Viberate (for analytics), Openstage (for fan data), Notes·fm (for music credits) and Vobile (for AI-music detection).
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source musically.com ’














