Monday, September 19, 2016

Pandora's enhanced streaming opens new front in music wars

Record labels are clinging to $US9.99 a month subscriptions for on-demand music. Pandora Media, the internet radio company, last week signed deals with Sony Music, Warner Music and others to offer this for the first time - priced at the same rate charged by Apple, Spotify and others. But in a break from the new normal, the labels will also back a $4.99 a month service offering streaming radio with more listener control (such as pausing or skipping tracks) and offline streaming.
             

Labels had been wary about enabling cheaper options lest they once again cannibalise existing revenues. But all sides need to increase the size of the pie, seeking a big untapped audience willing to pay less than $120 a year.

Pandora has 78m active users but growth has stalled. Adding the $9.99 service, for which Pandora takes 30-35 per cent, is unlikely to solve that. But it may help deter users in search of a premium service from switching to rivals. Pandora reckons it can have a $1.3bn subscription business in five years, which would require almost 11m users to upgrade. The company has data to inform that estimate, but does not explain why those of its customers with the propensity to pay have not already taken up the on-demand services available from rivals.

The big question is how replicable is the newly enhanced internet radio product, which will continue to support the bulk of revenues. Pandora has played catch-up in on-demand.

Friday, August 26, 2016

Gympie Music Muster 2016

MOOROOKA’S Jill Beth is one to watch in the Australian music scene.
         

The talented 31-year-old starlet is set to play at the Gympie Music Muster this week before heading off to Nashville, Tennessee, to work on her music. Beth said the muster was a great event to be part of.

“It doesn’t matter that you’re not the big superstar, they treat all the artists really respectfully, and the audience is so into it and just happy to soak it up,” she said.

Beth said music had always been part of her life and she came from a family where singing and dancing at all hours was “a pretty normal thing”.

And despite the muster, she said her style was not “straight up country”. “I have influences of Americana and alternative country but I also love a really great pop song, so you’ll definitely hear elements of all of that in my music,” she said.

Inspired by artists she grew up listening to such as James Taylor, Jackson Brown and The Eagles, and modern-day artists including John Mayer and Casey Musgrave, Beth said she would love for music to be a fulltime career.