Music Streaming Showdown Looms as Spotify Competition Heats Up

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 2 April 2015 11:53 IST
This week's all-star launch of US rapper Jay Z's streaming music service may not have caused Spotify's management to lose sleep but analysts predict tough days ahead as tech giant Apple prepares to enter the fray.

The glitzy rebrand of the Tidal service which Jay Z bought from another Swedish firm Aspiro for $56 million (roughly Rs. 348 crores), was billed as a new departure in streaming: higher quality audio and owned by artists for artists, not record labels and tech companies.

After a day's silence the news was welcomed by the world leader Spotify, despite the barely veiled criticism of streaming companies like it from US superstars including Madonna and Alicia Keys at the launch in New York.

Jonathan Forster, Spotify's vice president for Europe, told AFP in Stockholm that his company welcomed the artists' initiative.

Advertisement

"I like the rallying cry that artists should get involved... We're definitely not trying to keep anyone down," he said.

Advertisement

Spotify has come under fire from artists like British band Radiohead and US pop star Taylor Swift who has shifted her catalogue to Tidal protesting that Spotify does not pay artists their fair share.

Its founder Daniel Ek has hit back, saying it had paid out $2 billion to artists and record labels since it launched in Sweden in 2008.

Advertisement

And music industry watchers have been quick to point out that the artists' beef is not with Spotify but with their own record labels.

"When it comes down to artists' payments, all streaming services play by the same rules dictated by the record labels," said Mark Mulligan at London-based music industry research firm Midia.

Advertisement

According to a study by French music industry trade group SNEP and accounting firm Ernst & Young, recording labels pocket 46 percent of streaming subscription revenues, while artists, publishers and songwriters share 17 percent, with the rest going to streaming providers and taxes.

'Apple controls the device'
With an estimated 60 million users in 58 countries, including 15 million who pay for ad-free music, Spotify dwarfs Tidal, which had just over half a million users in 31 countries when Jay Z bid for it in January. Spotify also costs half the price at $9.99 compared to $19.99 for Tidal.

Streaming which allows users to play unlimited on-demand music online has quickly shaken up the industry, narrowly edging out CD sales in revenues last year in the United States at $1.87 billion (roughly Rs. 11,626 crores).

But the world number one in streaming is a minnow compared to Apple in overall music consumption.

The US giant, which plans to launch its own service in the coming months following its $3.2 billion purchase of Beats Music last year, has about 500 million iTunes users.

"The Apple music service is the one I'd be running scared from if I was Spotify. At the very least 50 percent of Spotify subscribers also happen to be IOS (Apple) device users," said Mulligan.

"There are endless things Apple can do... because it controls the device and the operating system and everything on it. You could suddenly find this music service on the front screen of your phone."

In a survey published by Midia this week, 62 percent of music subscribers in the US said they were likely to sign up to the new service.

'Almost everyone on Earth'
While Apple also has to deal with record labels reportedly failing recently to secure lower licensing fees Spotify arguably faces an even bigger challenge from YouTube which offers free music videos available on all devices with an Internet connection.

"As a market leader you're probably more worried about where people are listening to music on the Internet. More people are listening via YouTube which is owned by Google the biggest Internet company of all," said Olle Aronsson, at the Swedish tech news site Breakit, adding that streaming is still in its infancy, representing less than 15 percent of music sales revenue in the US and Britain.

But Spotify, under fire from record label bosses and artists to cut back on its own ad-supported free music which it uses to attract paying clients sees free music as the future.

"We've always thought that 'free' has been a huge part of music wherever you look historically you had (free music on) the radio and you went out and bought vinyl or cassettes," said Forster, adding that illegal downloading has made charging for music difficult.

"We also felt that it's about scale. If you're talking about a billion or a half a billion users you can start building really interesting free businesses. If you're an advertising business you can tap into Google or Facebook levels of revenue," he said.

"The global market of people who like music is almost everyone on Earth."

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Home entertainment, Internet, Spotify
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 16 Pro Max Offers Listed Ahead of Flipkart Sale
  2. iPhone 17 Series, iPhone Air Pre-Order Discounts Announced by Retailers in India
  3. Instamart Sale: iPhone 16, OnePlus 13R at Jaw-Dropping Prices
  4. OnePlus 13 Gets Big Price Cut at Amazon Great Indian Festival Sale
  5. Google Pixel 10 Review: A Brilliant Phone We Wanted to Love
  6. WhatsApp Now Lets You Set Notification Reminders for Messages
  7. Early Deals on PlayStation 5 and Accessories Revealed Ahead of Amazon Sale
  8. YouTube Announces New AI Tools for Shorts Creators, Podcasters, Live Streamers
  9. Redmi 15R 5G With MediaTek Dimensity 6300 SoC, 6,000mAh Battery Launched
  10. Oppo Find X9 Pro Chipset, AnTuTu and Geekbench Scores Revealed
  1. Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag Remake Will Reportedly Feature RPG Mechanics, Launch in Early 2026
  2. Amazon Sale 2025: OnePlus 13 Deal We've All Been Waiting For Is Finally Here
  3. Instamart Quick India Movement Sale 2025 Goes Live on September 19 With Jaw-Dropping Prices on iPhone 16, OnePlus 13R, and More
  4. Redmi 15R 5G Launched With MediaTek Dimensity 6300 SoC, 6,000mAh Battery: Price, Specifications
  5. Bitcoin Climbs to $116,700 as Ethereum, Altcoins Consolidate Ahead of US Fed Policy Decision
  6. iPhone 17 Series Might Only Support Faster Charging With Apple’s New 60W Adaptor For Limited Time
  7. Xiaomi 15T Specifications Leaked; Tipped to Launch With MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultra SoC
  8. WhatsApp for iOS Adds Notification Reminders for Messages, Meetings, and Deadlines
  9. Palworld to Exit Early Access, Get Version 1.0 Release in 2026, Pocketpair Announces
  10. Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra With Redesigned Camera Module Seen in Leaked Case Renders
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.