PDA

View Full Version : Last.fm "frees the music"


wezman2k
01-27-2008, 02:38 AM
This news came out a couple days ago...I cannot believe no one has posted about it yet. This is revolutionary stuff.

By the way mods, sorry about the double post in the music biz forum, this thread belongs here.

http://blog.last.fm/2008/01/23/free-the-music

"A few days ago we sent out some cryptic invitations to a press conference in New York that Felix and Martin are presiding over. We’ve had fun in the office reading the rumors and speculation, but it’s time to spill the beans:

As of today, you can play full-length tracks and entire albums for free on the Last.fm website.

Something we’ve wanted for years—for people who visit Last.fm to be able to play any track for free—is now possible. With the support of the folks behind EMI, Sony BMG, Universal and Warner—and the artists they work with—plus thousands of independent artists and labels, we’ve made the biggest legal collection of music available to play online for free, the way we believe it should be.

Full-length tracks are now available in the US, UK, and Germany, and we’re hard at work broadening our coverage into other countries. During this initial public beta period, each track can be played up to 3 times for free before a notice appears telling you about our upcoming subscription service. The soon-to-be announced subscription service will give you unlimited plays and some other useful things. We’re also working on bringing full-length tracks to the desktop client and beyond.

Free full-length tracks are obviously great news for listeners, but also great for artists and labels, who get paid every time someone streams a song. Music on Last.fm is perpetually monetized. This is good because artists get paid based on how popular a song is with their fans, instead of a fixed amount.

We will be paying artists directly.

We already have licenses with the various royalty collection societies, but now unsigned artists can put their music on Last.fm and be paid directly for every song played. This helps to level the playing-field—now you can make music, upload it to Last.fm and earn money for each play. If you make music, you can sign up to participate for free.

We’re not printing money to pay for this—but the business model is simple enough: we are paying artists and labels a share of advertising revenue from the website.

Today we’re redesigning the music economy. There are already millions of tracks available, and we’re adding more every day. We will continue to work hard to bring this to everyone in the world."

PeterTuneCore
01-27-2008, 09:53 AM
This news came out a couple days ago...I cannot believe no one has posted about it yet. This is revolutionary stuff.


I've been following Last.fm for a while. This is a surprisingly small industry! I think its great that they're paying bands for streams. Bands collect fans, fans listen to the music, Last.fm makes money from those listeners. It makes sense that the bands should get paid for brining Last.fm those listeners.

Its nice to see the model continue to shift to allow artists to make money off their success and fame. It used to be that as bands became successful and popular they made money from selling the music, with the LastFM model, they are now beginning to make money in new ways

Right now, My big question: mechanicals. There's a statutory rate for mechanicals, and while you can negotiate it down, it has to bottom out somewhere. All those labels, major and minor, have made promises in their contracts to pay X for Y plays. Those rates come into play with digital downloads, but it is not yet clear if they will with non-terrestrial based interactive radio play. That's in the courts right now, in fact, and will determine a lot about how the industry progresses.

--Peter
peter@tunecore.com

sabriel9v
01-27-2008, 10:37 AM
You could always play full tracks on last fm. I think it's great that they're paying artists for the amount of streams they get now, but the service always allowed you to hear an artist's full songs via the radio option.