Streaming Services and the End of Music Collection
Wishing everyone a happy and healthy New Year! We’ll be back in action on Jan. 2.
Cloud Lockers, Streaming Services and the End of Music Ownership — variety.com
Amazon is just the first company to phase out its cloud music locker.
Some thoughts on Spotify and Muzak 2.0 — om.co
Why did we come to like playlists in the first place, instead of the compact discs or long play records? Why are playlists any different than mix tapes or burning CDs? It is a quest for personalization on our part as humans which attracts us to Spotify. Is it because of the fact that most of us don’t want to mess about with files? We all forget that tech companies are businesses, that take what we like and turn that into a lucrative addiction.
Black Artists Proclaim the Right to Rock in the Age of Streaming Music — www.newsweek.com
Artists like Gary Clark Jr., Alabama Shakes and Michael Kiwanuka are finding new audiences as traditional labels falter.
The Age of Abundance — 500ish.com
I’m an Apple Music user, but if anything, the situation is both more pronounced and seemingly better on Spotify. People seem to love the Discover Weekly area of the service for new music discovery. This is all music personalized to your tastes. In our age of data, this makes perfect sense.
Bandcamp Releases 2017 Year-End Numbers, Including Mind-Boggling Cassette Tape Stats — www.billboard.com
The company announced that 500 bands set up a Bandcamp page each day in 2017, or approximately 182,500 new bands in the calendar year, and that more than 17,000 cassette tapes were released this year alone.
Amazon Music to end support for streaming your uploaded MP3s — techcrunch.com
The shutdown affects both the free storage plan, which allowed for 250 songs to be stored in the cloud, as well the paid plan — originally $25 per year — which offered cloud storage for up to 250,000 songs.