Adam Sherwin, Media Correspondent, in Cannes
Posted on 01/27/2008 7:37:25 PM PST by Stoat
After a decade fighting to stop illegal file-sharing, the music industry will give fans today what they have always wanted: an unlimited supply of free and legal songs.
With CD sales in free fall and legal downloads yet to fill the gap, the music industry has reluctantly embraced the file-sharing technology that threatened to destroy it. Qtrax, a digital service announced today, promises a catalogue of more than 25 million songs that users can download to keep, free and with no limit on the number of tracks.
The service has been endorsed by the very same record companies - including EMI, Universal Music and Warner Music that have chased file-sharers through the courts in a doomed attempt to prevent piracy. The gamble is that fans will put up with a limited amount of advertising around the Qtrax websites jukebox in return for authorised use of almost every song available.
The service will use the peer-to-peer network, which contains not just hit songs but rarities and live tracks from the worlds leading artists.
Nor is a lack of compatibility with the iPod player expected to put fans off. Apple is unlikely to allow tracks downloaded from its rival to be compatible with iPods, but, while the iPod is the most popular music player, it has not succeeded in dominating the market: sales of the iPod account for 50 million out of 130 million total digital player sales. Qtrax has also spoken of an iPod solution, to be announced in April.
Qtrax files contain Digital Rights Management software, allowing the company to see how many times a song has been downloaded and played. Artists, record companies and publishers will be paid in proportion to the popularity of their music, while also taking a cut of advertising revenues.
The Qtrax team, which spent five years working on the system, promised a game-changing intervention in the declining recorded music market when the service was presented at the Midem music industry convention in Cannes.
The singer James Blunt gave Qtrax a cautious welcome. Im amazed that we now accept that people steal music, he said. I was taught not to steal sweets from a sweet shop. But I want to learn how this service works, given the condition the music industry is in.
Qtrax, a subsidiary of Brilliant Technologies Corporation, has raised $30 million (£15 million) to set up the service, which is available in the US and Europe from today. Allan Klepfisz, president of Qtrax, said: Customers now expect music to be free but they do not want to use illegal sites. We believe this . . . has the support of the music industry and allows artists to get paid.
Ford, McDonalds and Microsoft are among the advertisers signed up to support what is thought to be the worlds largest legal music store. The service says that adverts will be nonintrusive and will not appear each time a song is played. As with iTunes, customers will have to download Qtrax software. They will own the songs permanently but will be encouraged to dock their player with the store every 30 days so it can gather information on which songs have been played.
Jean-Bernard Levy, chief executive of Vivendi Universal, said the crisis in the music industry had been overstated despite EMIs radical cost-cutting. He said: Look at Universal we have double-digit profit margins. But we would like strong competition from the other major record companies to help the industry grow. Universal has poached the Rolling Stones from EMI and Mr Levy said that others could follow as thousands of staff and artists are made redundant.
On the appearance of Qtrax, Mr Levy gave warning that the lack of compatibility between competing digital music players was as big a problem as file-sharing. And Paul McGuinness, the manager of U2, said that the sound quality of MP3 downloads was becoming an issue for bands and fans. There is a growing consumer revolt against online audio quality, he said.
I wonder if I can download a free copy of Johnny Cymbal’s ‘Mr. Baseman’?
Awright! “Rockford Files” theme, here I come!
You want to be a Bass man too?
Sounds like a giant piece of spyware to me.
The only problem being that Apple has sold WAY over a 100 million IPODS....the author doesn’t know squat....
bump for later
Ganz gut!
My thought also.
That guy looks like a cicada with glasses.
I’ll be looking for the Wild Tchoupitoulas.
I see where “artists, record companies and publishers” will be paid. No provision for payment to the writers. Typical of mechanical reproduction where royalty payments are made to the publisher, but writers often don’t get paid by the publisher according the terms of the contract. A writer needs to retain control of his own publishing to the greatest extent possible or he’s going to get screwed.
Now I know what Marty Feldman’s kids must look like.
From the article:
Qtrax files contain Digital Rights Management software, allowing the company to see how many times a song has been downloaded and played.
(edit)
They will own the songs permanently but will be encouraged to dock their player with the store every 30 days so it can gather information on which songs have been played.
******************************
I wonder if "encouraged" means "The software will be disabled until you dock it" ?
Thanks to this, I would imagine that Jammie Thomas is feeling even more dumb than before.
Is it any wonder the Germans are crazy for Hasselhoff...?
Imagine if you could immediately access and download ANY piece of music you remember from your past?
The record companies are sitting on a gold mine and they don't even seem to realize it. So what if it's "out of print." No need to pay money reissuing it. Just put a digital copy online. Hopefully they are starting to come around.
They are missing a bet here. While music sharing *can* result in increased sales, it has to be done through traditional music outlets. That is, listen to it for free from download, but if you want to buy it, get it from a record store.
If they try to sell it online, it defeats the purpose, because you can get the track for free online. They have to sell the physical disks to profit from this model.
However, that being said, even more importantly, the music industry needs to exploit one of the most impressive side effects of peer swapped music: it encourages downloaders to find not just other music from their favorite artists, but to discover new artists.
For example, a downloader likes an artist who belongs to the “Chicago Electric Blues” genre. On the Internet, he can quickly find out what other artists belong to that genre, and quickly get samples of their work, knowing that they are a lot like the artist he already likes.
Practically speaking, this means that instead of wanting just three *physical* albums from one artist, he discovers that there are fifty or a hundred albums out there for artists he has just discovered.
From the consumer point of view, it is like discovering that a novel you really enjoyed was just the first of 20 written in that series, by that author. You are in consumer heaven.
And *that* is what the music industry needs to capitalize on. Both letting downloaders know that there is a LOT more that they might like out there, *and* to be able to give them the physical product when they want it.
Say they have just discovered Big Bill Broonzy. There might not be an album of his still on the shelves. The music industry needs to get a print of that album to that consumer. They might also need to print up single copies of every other album BBB ever did.
And *that* is where the real money is. “Pirate” song downloading didn’t cost them a penny, it made them a fortune.
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