Monday, February 9, 2015

REPOST: Norway Has Figured Out How To Solve The Problem Of Music Piracy

The survey says it all. Business Insider Australia reports yet another significant contribution of streaming to the music industry: combating piracy. The plummeting numbers of illegal download and pirated copies are lending more value to music streaming:

Image Source: businessinsider.com.au

New data from Norway reveals that music piracy has completely collapsed in the country. Music Business Worldwide is reporting that the country has hit upon a way to rely on streaming to encourage residents to enjoy music legally.

A new music industry survey asked people under 30 in Norway whether they illegally download music online. The study, carried out by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, revealed that there had been a substantial drop in the number of young Norwegian people illegally downloading content.

In five years, the number of people admitting to illegally downloading files online has gone from 80% of survey respondents to just 4%. The survey also revealed that less than 1% of young people in Norway said illegal downloads were their main source of music.

The IFPI is, predictably, pleased with the result. “In the past five years, we have virtually eliminated the illegal file-sharing of music,” said Marte Thorsby of IFPI Norge.

These numbers aren’t a surprise — Norway has worked for years to reduce the number of residents engaging in piracy. An Ipsos survey from 2013 revealed a continuing decline in the amount of pirated music in Norway.

Image Source: businessinsider.com.au

So how is Norway managing to buck the trend and reduce the levels of piracy? Simple: Most people in Norway use streaming services instead of buying music.

Digital music is dominant in Norway, the IFPI says. That’s not unusual, but it’s the popularity of streaming services that seems to have caused the decline in piracy.

The IFPI says that income from streaming sites in Norway increased 60% from 2012 to 2013, and streaming accounts for 65% of Norway’s music market. That’s a big difference from other countries. The IFPI estimates that 27% of global digital music revenue comes from streaming services.


Streaming services like Spotify, Tidal, and WiMP are big business in Norway, and the IFPI credits these companies with reducing piracy. “We are now offering services that are both better and more user-friendly than illegal platforms,” Thorge said.

Image Source: businessinsider.com.au

Piracy is such a non-issue in Norway that police barely have to do anything about it. As Torrent Freak points out, the country hasn’t been cracking down on filesharers in the way the US and UK have been. In fact, nobody in the country has been prosecuted for illegally downloading music, and no piracy sites are blocked by the country’s internet service providers.

Timothy Munro Roberts’ Station Digital mobile application allows free access to high quality music streams. Click here for updates on digital technology.

Friday, January 30, 2015

Up on the cloud: How music streaming can bring artists to new heights

One of 2014’s biggest entertainment headlines was about how Taylor Swift, one of the world’s most popular artists of recent times, pulled her entire song catalog out of music-streaming site Spotify. There are many differing sides on the whole event, and on music streaming itself, but it should be safe to discuss the positive results an artist may yield from having their music shared on streaming hubs.

Image Source: digitaltrends.com

For instance, musicians, whether new or seasoned, may at times find it hard to reach their potential listeners. However, music streaming is another avenue for audiences, now from all over the world, thanks to the Internet, to discover an artist’s work.

Consider the very recognizable feeling of searching for something on Wikipedia and then clicking on another interesting topic within the article. Suddenly it’s hours later and one’s read several pages of topics only tangentially related to the first. When musicians put their music in the cloud, they’re opening their work up to a whole world of people who can stumble upon their next favorite jam.

Image Source: pcdj.com

Because of this and the fact that technology has made recording songs easier and more affordable, music streaming can also be seen as a means for leveling the playing field for artists. A musician who is social media savvy can have an increased fighting chance of finding an audience, even if he can’t afford an experienced public relations and marketing staff.

 Streaming also another way to get fans to buy merchandise and concert tickets, both of which are where the artist’s real revenue comes in. One can think of it as advertising, in a way. Also, while streaming services’ per-song payments are lower compared to the per-song downloads, the latter is a one-time deal and the former can really add up in time.

Image Source: johnrhoda.com

It’s still quite early for music streaming. With the advantages mentioned above and even more technological and business-model improvements in the horizon, more artists may soon realize how putting their music in the cloud can be a really good thing.  

Musicians can share their work with the world at StationDigital, an innovative music streaming hub founded by tech entrepreneur Timothy Munro Roberts that offers a wide variety of musical genres. Visit this Twitter account for updates on music and streaming technology.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Soundtrack for the wanderlust: Best road trip songs

Driving across the country could get tiresome. However, it could also be one of the most enjoyable activities when you’re with the right people and if you have a good playlist.

Image Source: buzzfeed.com

Music has been proven for its health benefits. Playing your favorite songs while cruising down the highway could make traveling a little bit easier, thereby alleviating travel-related stress. As studies show, listening to music is like being massaged. Having a set of great music is like having good food while on the road.

Image Source: travelettes.net

There have been many inspiring, meaningful, and greatly enjoyable songs about travel. One’s personal experience, genre preference, and the length of time spent on a trip are only among the considerations for choosing the best road trip songs. Paying attention and picking the right system for listening will help maximize the musical experience.

Image Source: prairiehive.com

By counting in public opinion and suggestions, CNN came up with a list of all-time favorite road trip songs. All in all, the songs capture the essence of travels, journeys, expeditions, explorations, and being at home. Included in the top 10, as cross-referenced with other survey-based sets, are the following songs:

1. "Life is a Highway" (Tom Cochrane, 1991)
2. "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" (Nat King Cole, 1946)
3. "I’ve Been Everywhere" (Johnny Cash, 1996)
4. "Radar Love" (Golden Earring, 1973)
5. "City of New Orleans" (Arlo Guthrie, 1972) 6. "Travelin’ Man" (Ricky Nelson, 1961)
7. "Running on Empty" (Jackson Browne, 1977)
8. "Ramblin’ Man" (The Allman Brothers Band, 1973)
9. "Turn the Page" (Bob Seger, 1973) 10. "Me and Bobby McGee" (Janis Joplin, 1971)  

Timothy Munro Roberts’ Station Digital app allows you to listen to these tracks through the cloud webstore technology. Create you travel playlist by checking out more songs here.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

REPOST: LOOK OUT SPOTIFY: CD-QUALITY STREAMING SERVICE TIDAL HOPES TO MAKE A SPLASH THIS FALL

While online streaming services like Spotify and Pandora have been dominating today’s music consumption, there’s something to be said about these services’ poor sound quality. This article features up-and-coming music streaming service Tidal, which boasts CD quality audio play as well as partnerships with digital audio heavyweights such as Denon and Harman.  

Image Source: digitaltrends.com

Whether you’re a Spotify addict, a Pandora fan, or (by the slimmest of chances) a Beats Music subscriber, there’s one thing that nearly all major streaming services have in common: low quality audio. Oslo, Norway’s Aspiro Group aims to bring music streaming up a notch with Tidal, a new CD-quality streaming service launching this fall in the U.S. and U.K. And to pad Tidal’s landing, Aspiro Group has already brokered partnerships with 16 audio companies to host its new service.

Some audioheads may recall Sonos’ recent announcement of exclusive rights to Deezer Elite, another service that offers streaming at CD quality, which, at 16-bit/44.1-kHz resolution, far exceeds the MP3-level music users get from virtually all the big names in the industry.

Tidal has already matched Deezer Elite’s partnership with Sonos, and tacks on other big names including Denon’s new HEOS system, and Harman’s recently announced Omni speaker system, which we had a chance to preview at IFA this year. Apart from those bigger players, Tidal has announced partnerships with Bluesound & NAD, Meridian, Auralic, Electrocompaniet, Simple Audio, Raumfeld, Dynaudio, Audiovector, Pro-ject, Airable by Tune In Media, HiFiAkademie, and ickStream.

When it launches sometime this fall, new subscribers to Tidal will be greeted by a $20/month subscription fee — twice the cost of most low-res services. For the heftier investment, Tidal users will get commercial-free access to 25 million lossless audio tracks streamed in FLAC or ALAC format, over 75,000 HD music videos, and “tailor-made editorial” from music journalists.

Along with its impressive list of audio partners, Tidal will also be available for both iOS and Android devices, as well as offering Web players for Mac and PC. And the company claims its first 16 partners are just the start. Tidal will look to garner more audio partners in the future and is looking to expand to as many as 50 countries worldwide.

It should be interesting to see the reaction to Tidal when it hits the scene this Fall. Will listeners be willing to pay an extra $10 for top-notch streaming, or will the service be yet another casualty to the 10-million-strong reign of Spotify? We’ll keep our eyes on Tidal as it approaches its launch, and will update this story accordingly as more details arise.
 
Timothy Munro Roberts’ StationDigital is a multitasking cloud-hosted online streaming service that allows subscribers access to a bank of over 20 million songs by thousands of different artists. For more updates and news on the music industry and online music streaming, follow this Twitter account.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

REPOST: A Musician’s Guide to Streaming: The Pros & Cons of Spotify, Bandcamp, SoundCloud & More

Today’s artists know that uploading their music online is the fastest way to get their music to as many listeners, fans, and recording companies as possible. This article lists the advantages and disadvantages of the six biggest online music streaming sites for the benefit of fledgling singer-songwriters, DJs, bands, and musicians.

Where to put your music as a beginning artist can be a daunting question. Every online service has pros and cons, and different programs work better for different genres, artists and scenes. Finding the right distribution method can be tough, and the industry is still going through growing pains when it comes to royalty payments.

Knowing the ins and outs of each distribution service is vital as an artist, so here’s a look at six prominent mediums and what they have to offer.

Bandcamp

Bandcamp is frequently used by smaller bands and labels to distribute music cheaply and efficiently. The structure of the site allows for easy downloads as well as streaming, and Bandcamp allows bands to name any price for a download. Customers are also able to buy physical releases and merch from a band, listed underneath the digital option.

Bandcamp’s payment program is simple: the company takes 10 percent of merch sales and 15 percent of downloads. After a seller reaches a $5,000 profit, then the Bandcamp cut drops to 10 percent of digital profit. Revenue is linked to a seller’s PayPal account, so that $5,000 can come from any number of releases and artists directed to the same PayPal account.

For $10 a month, an artist can upgrade to a Bandcamp Pro account, allowing the seller to send out discount codes, use private streaming options and access in depth analytics.

Bandcamp has been lauded for its artist-friendly business and design, making it a good choice for indie musicians. The only downside is that no revenue is generated from album streams, so if you like an artist and want them to make some money from Bandcamp, make sure to buy an album once in a while.

Soundcloud

Whereas Bandcamp allows artists to put music up for free and then takes a revenue cut, Soundcloud goes the opposite direction. Free accounts are allowed only two hours of upload time, so to really get the most out of Soundcloud, you’re going to have shell out some money up front.

A Pro account costs $6 a month or $55 a year and allows for four hours worth of uploads. An Unlimited account costs $15 a month or $135 a year, and you’d expect, allows for unlimited uploads, though users are only allowed to add 30 hours of music each week.

The extended accounts allow for more downloads, analytics and let a user spotlight five songs at the top of his or her profile. Pro and Unlimited users can also turn on Quiet Mode, making comments and statistics private.

However, Soundcloud does not directly pay royalties for streams. If you’re looking to get paid for streams, you’ll have to partner up with non-profit SoundExchange and license your music, making Soundcloud more of a tool for sharing rather than selling. Links to iTunes can be included as a Buy button, however.

YouTube

How much YouTube pays songwriters for featuring songs on its service is hard to find out, as Google has artists sign a non-disclosure agreement. It doesn’t appear to be much, however.

According to a piece by The Guardian, an anonymous songwriter reported a profit of $80 for nine million plays. YouTube also does not have performance rights agreements in every country with the service, so some views do not actually count toward royalties at all, but still bring in advertising money for YouTube.

Even in the U.K., where YouTube does have a deal with the Performance Rights Society, the video streaming company pays a lump sum for licensing, which is then distributed among songwriters. This model means that the popularity of a song makes little difference for royalties.

 The best bet for generating a profit at YouTube is by generating enough views to become a a premium partner and earning money through advertising. While YouTube is very useful for sharing music and especially live performances, don’t go into it expecting to generate a significant profit.

Image Source: pastemagazine.com

Spotify

Spotify often catches a lot of flack for its royalty payments which range between $.006 and $.0084 per stream. The company claims that a small indie band makes about $3,300 a month off an album, while a highly successful indie band makes $76,000, but several artists like Zoƫ Keating have claimed to received only $808 from more than 200,000 streams on the service.

While it does not directly cost to put music on Spotify, the service only uploads music from labels and distributors. If you don’t have a label, then you’ll have to go through an artist aggregator. Some services like Tunecore charge a yearly fee for distribution, while others such as CDBaby take a small cut of net earnings.

Spotify does allow artists to put merchandise up for free on their profiles, and no cut is taken for merch sales. However, only three items can be listed at a time.

Pandora

According to Pandora, one million plays results in about $1,370. That money is then divided among the label, songwriters and performers, which makes for a very small sum of money awarded to each musician.

However, it is worth noting that while it’s hard to make money on Internet radio like Pandora, it’s even harder to make money off terrestrial radio. AM/FM stations only have to pay a songwriter’s royalties, not performers.

So while Internet radio services such as Pandora may not pay much, having your music on there is still a bit more lucrative than traditional radio. Getting your music on Pandora requires that your music already be on a service such as iTunes or Bandcamp, and similar to Spotify, royalties can be collected through a label or SoundExchange.

iTunes

iTunes has long been a dominant distribution medium for music—relying on downloads more than streaming—and getting music on the program is fairly streamlined. However, for smaller artists, the costs can sometimes trump the benefits.

Most artists have to use an aggregator to get music posted, meaning that a payment plan with the aggregator will have to be used. iTunes then takes around 30 percent of sales from music. While this is a bit more costly than other services, the popularity of iTunes does make it an appealing service. Downloads from iTunes also easily go onto an iPod or other device, which makes music more readily accessible for fans.

Other Options

Rdio, Beats Music, Rhapsody, Napster and Google Play Music, work on a similar model to Spotify, but the latter four don’t have a freemium model, meaning royalty payments are typically higher (an accounting from an anonymous indie label shows Google Play paying nine times what Spotify pays—even Rdio shows a significant per-stream increase from Spotify). Deezer also works similarly to Spotify and is available in nearly 200 countries—just not the U.S. Slacker Rdio and Samsung’s new Milk Music operate more like Pandora. Using a service like SoundExchange can earn royalties from the likes iHeartRadio and SiriusXM, as well as Pandora. Xbox Music, while relatively small compared to the other services on this list, has become known for paying much higher royalties than its peers.

Some musicians like Camper Van Beethoven/Cracker frontman David Lowery, have argued that no streaming service pays enough to sustain musicians, and it may not even be enough to sustain companies like Spotify that rely on the freemium model. There’s still a lot of shaking out to happen in the music-streaming industry. We’d love to hear from musicians about their experiences with any of these streaming sites and others.

Timothy Munro Roberts is the brains behind StationDigital, a cloud-hosted music streaming service that gives subscribers unbridled access to over 20 million songs spanning 20 musical genres and thousands of various artists. To create a playlist you can listen to any time of the day, visit this website.

Friday, August 22, 2014

REPOST: Streaming Music Service Aims To Choke Russian Piracy Problem

Music piracy in Russia has been killing industry sales for years. This article details how music streaming startup Zvooq is equipped to address this problem, with its business model echoing that of popular American music streaming service Pandora.

Music piracy has gotten so bad in Russia that the usual cease-and-desist approach just won’t cut it for major labels any more. In the spring, Sony Music Russia, Universal Music Russia, and Warner Music UK began a legal battle with Mail.Ru, the owner of Russia’s largest social network vKontakte, over accusations of “deliberately facilitating piracy on a large scale” on its social media site. Hearings are scheduled to begin on September eighth.

VKontakte is accused of letting users store and share copyrighted music without appropriate licensing agreements between the labels and the service.

 “We have repeatedly highlighted this problem over a long period of time,” Frances Moore, Chief Executive of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry said in a statement last April.

“Music companies in Russia need a secure environment where they can invest in artists, offer new music to consumers and develop a viable business,” Leonid Agronov, CEO of NFMI, said in the same statement.

This week, a new streaming music service called Zvooq (Russian for “sound”) received $20 million in new funding to help create an attractive –and above all, legal– streaming music service for the Russian market.

The What and Why: 

 Zvooq bills itself as the music ecosystem designed for emerging markets with high piracy. This is how it differentiates itself from streaming competitors like Yandex.music and Deezer.

Zvooq’s argument is that music consumption is an experience, and that users come back to the experiences they find the most comforting. In other words, it’s not the availability of music that holds long-term value, but the experience with the music.

For example, illegal, unlicensed, or otherwise “pirated” content is widely available in Russia, but it comes with a pitiful experience for users. Pirate sites nest a single link to a downloadable archive among a minefield of fake links and advertisements. Any false click could link away to an advertiser’s site, or even worse, to something malicious.

Users are not in the habit of paying for their content, but are willing to trade a terrible experience for their desired content, as long as it’s free.

Zvooq utilizes an ad-supported freemium model similar to Pandora , and has a subscription tier that costs 199 Roubles per month, or roughly $5 USD. By providing an affordable, user friendly experience, it’s hoping it can provide Russian users an alternative to piracy.

It has more than 2.7 million registered users already, and has a number of high-profile partnerships with retailers, consumer electronics manufacturers, and wireless carriers.

According to IFPI, Russia has the potential to be a top ten digital music market if it can successfully shift away from a market dominated by piracy.

Disclosure by way of Anecdote

The Mp3 file extension was first released in the summer of 1995 as I was about to enter my senior year of high school. I spent that summer going to punk rock shows in basements and formed my own music group. My endeavours at musicmaking actually developed alongside the spread of mp3 culture and the maturation of millennial consumers. By my sophomore year of college, the band I was in had put a considerable amount of our time and money into releasing our own CD. We pressed 2000 discs, and went on tour to promote it across the country. In mid-1999, a person claiming that they had bought our CD at a street market in a small Russian town contacted us by email. 
Image Source: forbes.com
I dismissed it as a scam of some sort, since Nigerian 419 scams were quite prevalent at the time. Yet it didn’t end with that first message.

A few weeks later, another Russian email came in asking us if we could play a show in Saint Petersburg. I responded to this message with incredulity. Apparently this person had also purchased our CD in Russia, and believed we were of big enough renown to travel overseas.

I had no idea how our CDs had gotten there.

They said it wasn’t uncommon for brand new American music to turn up in Russia, but had no explanation of how our music could have gotten there in the first place. To this day, I still have no evidence that the discs were actually available in Russia other than a handful of emails from 1999-2002 saying “I saw your CD in [various Russian city names]“.

 I have always assumed someone in the U.S. ripped mp3s from a disc they bought, and shared them on the nascent peer-to-peer filesharing networks. This was the year Napster debuted, after all.

If the reach of Russian music pirates was long enough to touch even my unpopular band of late-90′s teenagers, imagine the effect it has had on the popular ones. Zvooq has quite a task ahead of it.  

Timothy Munro Roberts is the genius behind online music streaming hub Station Digital, a multitasking service that gives subscribers access to over 20 million songs from all kinds of musical genres. Keep posted on updates on music platforms by subscribing to this Facebook page.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Hard-to-find no more: The impressive song library of streaming apps

Some songs were so wonderfully played and written that fans and music connoisseurs wonder why they never charted.
Such was the point of this Huffington Post article, which listed down quite a handsome number of tunes that well captured the ‘80s, when glam rock was in and tons of hairspray fashioned thick piles of hair.
However, songs on the said list, such as David Bowie's tuneful and moody "Ashes to Ashes" and "Burning Up," a fiery, upbeat tune from a then up-and-coming Madonna, were pushed aside into oblivion by smash hits that ruled the radio and the Top 40 charts in the ‘80s.
Image Source: iorr.org
Other gems, like Queen's "Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" and Eric Clapton's "May You Never," were not big enough to make it to the iconic artists' compilation albums, leaving frustrated music lovers thinking of taking trips to specialty record bars or rare-item stores just to get a hold of these tunes, no matter how far and wide and tedious the search can get.
Music aficionados shouldn't fret, though. Digital copies of these songs exist somewhere along the infinite cloud. All it takes is hitting the search bar, or sifting through the sea of music streaming sites and online radio channels.
Image Source: mosesavalon.com
With libraries averaging 25 million songs, listeners subscribed to music streaming services will definitely not end up empty-handed if it's rare musical gems that they are finding.
Image Source: cnmeonline.com
For the discriminating, curious, and adventurous tastes, music from niche artists are just a few taps away, and so are relatively unknown tracks and covers by icons back when they were fledging artists. What was once close to being unimaginable has indeed arrived, and waiting to be explored.
Get both standards and rare finds only from premium music streaming sites like Timothy Roberts' StationDigital. Visit this website to know more about StationDigital.