Share this postPlatform & StreamThe Three Eras of Paid Streaming; Should Spotify Lose Free Subscriptions?Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMoreThe Three Eras of Paid Streaming; Should Spotify Lose Free Subscriptions?Platform & StreamJul 31, 2017Share this postPlatform & StreamThe Three Eras of Paid Streaming; Should Spotify Lose Free Subscriptions?Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMoreShareStreaming has driven such a revenue renaissance within the major record labels that the financial markets are now falling over themselves to work out where they can invest in the market, and indeed whether they should. Spotify needs to ditch its free subscriptions to boost profits and appease the major record labels.Apple just killed off its groundbreaking music player. It's the perfect opportunity to whack iTunes, too.Imagine being a young artist trying to find an entrance into the music industry, dreaming of developing a successful career. Think it’s hard to execute?After a run of successful concert tours for emerging artists tied to its Alt Nation and The Highway channels, SiriusXM is touring three emerging artists from its Coffee House channel this summer.Amid rumors of bankruptcy, SoundCloud finds itself where many of its forebears have: slouching unsuccessfully towards scale and profitability.After Tidal jumped out the gate with a press conference debacle that just seemed like a bunch of celebrities jacking eachother off, the backlash was swift. “…the entire music industry stood on a…Hundreds of new podcasts now available through Deezer.The Grand Ole Opry has announced the launch of eight new digital series, to debut on the Opry's YouTube channel during August 2017.Lyor Cohen, YouTube’s global head of music, last night expounded on a range of topics at a music business power panel hosted by the Tommy Boy chairman and New Music Seminar founder Tom Silverman.Working under the Apple umbrella, I have a unique opportunity to work on a streaming service from the inside. I thought I could help set a precedent where artists could actually be paid and the fans could feel like they were dealing with a service run by people who actually care about music.PreviousNext