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Digital music store

A digital music store is a business that sells digital audio files of music recordings over the Internet. Customers gain ownership of a license to use the files, in contrast to a music streaming service, where they listen to recordings without gaining ownership. Customers pay either for each recording or on a subscription basis. Online music stores generally also offer partial streaming previews of songs, with some songs even available for full length listening. They typically show a picture of the album art or of the performer or band for each song. Some online music stores also sell recorded speech files, such as podcasts, and video files of movies.

Sales from the online iTunes music store, operated by Apple Inc.

History

Early years

The first free, high-fidelity online music archive of downloadable songs on the Internet was the Internet Underground Music Archive (IUMA),[1] which was started by Rob Lord, Jeff Patterson and Jon Luini from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1993.[2] Sony Music Entertainment Japan launched the first digital music store in Japan on 20 December 1999, entitled Bitmusic, which initially focused on A-sides of singles released by Japanese domestic musicians.[3][4]

The realization of the market for downloadable music grew widespread with the development of Napster, a music and file sharing service created by Shawn Fanning that made a major impact on the Internet scene in 2000. Some services have tethered downloads, meaning that playing songs requires an active membership. Napster was founded as a pioneering peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing Internet service that emphasized sharing audio files, typically music, encoded in MP3 format. The original company ran into legal difficulties over copyright infringement, ceased operations and was eventually acquired by Roxio. In its second incarnation Napster became an online music store until Rhapsody acquired it from Best Buy[5] on 1 December 2011. Later companies and projects successfully followed its P2P file sharing example such as Gnutella, Freenet, Kazaa, Bearshare, and many others. Some services, like LimeWire, Scour, Grokster, Madster, and eDonkey2000, were brought down or changed due to similar circumstances.

In 2000, Factory Records entrepreneur Tony Wilson and his business partners launched an early online music store, Music33, which sold MP3s for 33 pence per song.[6]

The major record labels eventually decided to launch their own online stores, allowing them more direct control over costs and pricing and more control over the presentation and packaging of songs and albums. Sony Music Entertainment's service did not do as well as was hoped. Many consumers felt the service was difficult to navigate and use. Sony's pricing of US$3.50 per song track also discouraged many early adopters of the service. Furthermore, as MP3 Newswire pointed out in its review of the service, users were actually only renting the tracks for that $3.50, because the patron did not own the audio file. After a certain point the files expired and could not be played again without repurchase. The service quickly failed.

Undaunted, the record industry tried again. Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment teamed up with a service called Duet, later renamed pressplay. EMI, AOL/Time Warner and Bertelsmann Music Group teamed up with MusicNet. Again, both services struggled, hampered by high prices and heavy limitations on how downloaded files could be used once paid for.[7] In the end, consumers chose instead to download music using illegal, free file sharing programs, which many consumers felt were more convenient and easier to use.

Non-major label services like eMusic, Cductive and Listen.com (now Rhapsody) sold the music of independent labels and artists. The demand for digital audio downloading skyrocketed after the launch of Apple's iTunes Store (then called iTunes Music Store) in April 2003 and the creation of portable music and digital audio players such as the iPod. These players enabled music fans to carry their music with them, wherever they went.

Amazon launched its Amazon MP3 service for the US in September 2007, expanding it gradually to most countries where Amazon operates.

Rise

An increasing number of new services appeared in the 2000s that enabled musicians to sell their music directly to fans without an intermediary. These type of services usually use e-commerce-enabled web widgets that embed into many types of web pages. This turns each web page into the musician's own online music store. Furthermore, there had been a boom in "boutique" music stores that cater to specific audiences.[8]

On October 10, 2007, English rock band Radiohead released the album In Rainbows as a download. Listeners were allowed to purchase the album for whatever price they wanted to pay, legally allowing them to download the album for free. About one-third of people who downloaded the album paid nothing, with the average price paid being £4. After three months online the album was taken down by the band and released on compact disc (CD). As of April 2008, the largest online music store was the iTunes Store, with around 80% of the market.[9][failed verification] On 3 April 2008, the iTunes Store surpassed Wal-Mart as the biggest music retailer in the United States, a milestone in the music industry as it was the first time in history that an online music retailer exceeded those of physical music formats (e.g., record shops selling CDs).

In the early 2010s, online music stores—especially iTunes—experienced a marked increase in sales. Consumer spending shifted away from the purchase of CDs in favor of purchasing albums from online music stores, or more commonly, purchasing individual songs. The iTunes platform has been the main reason for this shift, as it originally sold every song in its library for 99 cents. Historically, albums would be sold for about five times the cost of a single, but iTunes was selling every song for a tenth of the price of an album. However, in order to increase album sales, iTunes instituted "Complete My Album", which offered a discounted price on the full album when a consumer had already purchased one or more songs. Furthermore, with the rising popularity of Cyber Monday, online music stores have further gained ground over other music distribution sources.[10]

iTunes rolled out an Instant Gratification (instant grat) service, in which some individual tracks or bonus tracks were made available to customers who have pre-ordered albums.[11] The instant-grat tracks have changed the criteria for the UK Official Charts's singles. In 2013, David Bowie's "Where Are We Now?" was not allowed to chart because it was a pre-order for the album The Next Day, but Official Charts later ruled that effective February 10, 2013, certain instant grats could be allowed to appear in the Top 40.[12][13] Instant grats have also been offered on other online music stores including Amazon and Spotify.[14]

Compared to file sharing

Much controversy surrounds file sharing, so many of these points are disputed.

Advantages of legal online stores

  • The sale of licensed content adheres to copyright laws
  • More consistent and higher-quality metadata, because the entering of the metadata is more centralized and done with more oversight.[dubious ]
  • Music download companies are more accountable to users than creators of file-sharing programs
  • A centralized repository of music makes it easier to find the songs you want.
  • Notably, Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs claimed in his introduction of the iTunes Store that downloading from file-sharers is theoretically working for less than minimum wage - "By spending an hour of your time to save less than four dollars, he calculated, 'you're working for less than minimum wage!'".[15][16]

Disadvantages of online stores

  • Many major online music stores only offer music in one audio format.
  • Most online music stores sell music encoded in a lossy file format, compared to an audio CD. For the most part, music that is sold in lossy MP3 format is not sold at higher bit rate encoding.
  • Few online music stores offer music in lossless, metadata-enabled formats such as FLAC or ALAC, but instead stick to WAV files in which no metadata can generally be embedded. AIFF files with metadata are offered but in larger size files than FLAC or ALAC without advantage in sound quality. In contrast, lossless rips of CDs in FLAC format are widely available on the web for illegal downloading.
  • Some stores use Digital Rights Management technology, which limits the use of music files on certain devices. The restrictions vary between different services, and sometimes even between different songs from the same service.
  • Online stores charge for downloading songs and other content, whereas illegal file sharing does not have any fees (although illegal song downloaders may face fines and prosecution in some jurisdictions and illegal files may contain computer viruses)

Internet radio

Online music stores receive competition from online radio, as well as file sharing. Online radio is the free distribution of webcasts on the Internet via streaming. Listeners can create customizable "stations" based on a genre, artists, or song of their choice. Notable Internet Radio service providers are Pandora, Last FM and recently Spotify, with Pandora being the largest. Pandora holds 52% of the market share in Internet radio, with over 53 million registered users and almost one billion stations from which users can choose.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maurer, Wendy. . Archived from the original on 2008-04-29. Retrieved 2008-04-21.
  2. ^ Pescovitz, David (1995-08-30). "It's All Geek to Them; Digital Communes Find a Social Scene in Computers". Business section, The Cutting Edge: COMPUTING / TECHNOLOGY / INNOVATION. Los Angeles Times. p. 1. Archived from the original on 1995-08-30. Retrieved 2008-04-21. ...27-year-old Jon Luini, who co-founded the hip Internet Underground Music Archive (IUMA) in 1993
  3. ^ Herskovitz, Jon (December 2, 1999). "Sony Japan to sell online". Variety. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  4. ^ "インターネットによる邦楽新譜CDシングルタイトル曲の有料音楽配信を開始。". Sony Music Entertainment Japan. November 30, 1999. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  5. ^ Sisario, Ben (2011-10-03). "Rhapsody to Acquire Napster in Deal With Best Buy - NYTimes.com". United States: Mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  6. ^ Dave Simpson (2020-08-10). "'You've been smoking too much!': the chaos of Tony Wilson's digital music revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  7. ^ Harvey, Eric (April 2014). "Station to Station - The Past, Present, and Future of Streaming Music". Pitchfork. MusicNet limited listeners to 100 songs per month—they were streamable once each, or if downloaded, they were rendered unplayable after a month. Only Pressplay's premium subscription allowed 20 tracks per month to be burned to disc, with no expiring downloads.
  8. ^ Anderson, Chris (1 October 2004). "The Long Tail". Wired.
  9. ^ "Amazon flows into digital music sales". theregister.co.uk.
  10. ^ "Cyber Monday online sales surge by 33%". Financial Times. 29 November 2011.
  11. ^ "How an Unsigned Artist Used iTunes Instant Gratification to Get a Top 10 Hit on iTunes". 19 June 2014.
  12. ^ "Instant grat tracks to qualify for chart | News | Music Week".
  13. ^ "Official Charts rules changed following Bowie controversy". 14 February 2013.
  14. ^ "Danny Bryant Release New Album 'Revelation' This April".
  15. ^ Isaacson, Walter (2011). Steve Jobs. Simon and Schuster. p. 403. ISBN 9781451648539.
  16. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Steve Jobs Keynote iTunes Music Store Intro".
  17. ^ "Top streaming services active users U.S. 2016-2023". Statista. Retrieved 2022-01-25.

External links

digital, music, store, store, that, sells, musical, instruments, related, equipment, online, music, store, digital, music, store, business, that, sells, digital, audio, files, music, recordings, over, internet, customers, gain, ownership, license, files, contr. For a store that sells musical instruments and related equipment online see Music store A digital music store is a business that sells digital audio files of music recordings over the Internet Customers gain ownership of a license to use the files in contrast to a music streaming service where they listen to recordings without gaining ownership Customers pay either for each recording or on a subscription basis Online music stores generally also offer partial streaming previews of songs with some songs even available for full length listening They typically show a picture of the album art or of the performer or band for each song Some online music stores also sell recorded speech files such as podcasts and video files of movies Sales from the online iTunes music store operated by Apple Inc Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Rise 2 Compared to file sharing 2 1 Advantages of legal online stores 2 2 Disadvantages of online stores 3 Internet radio 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditEarly years Edit The first free high fidelity online music archive of downloadable songs on the Internet was the Internet Underground Music Archive IUMA 1 which was started by Rob Lord Jeff Patterson and Jon Luini from the University of California Santa Cruz in 1993 2 Sony Music Entertainment Japan launched the first digital music store in Japan on 20 December 1999 entitled Bitmusic which initially focused on A sides of singles released by Japanese domestic musicians 3 4 The realization of the market for downloadable music grew widespread with the development of Napster a music and file sharing service created by Shawn Fanning that made a major impact on the Internet scene in 2000 Some services have tethered downloads meaning that playing songs requires an active membership Napster was founded as a pioneering peer to peer P2P file sharing Internet service that emphasized sharing audio files typically music encoded in MP3 format The original company ran into legal difficulties over copyright infringement ceased operations and was eventually acquired by Roxio In its second incarnation Napster became an online music store until Rhapsody acquired it from Best Buy 5 on 1 December 2011 Later companies and projects successfully followed its P2P file sharing example such as Gnutella Freenet Kazaa Bearshare and many others Some services like LimeWire Scour Grokster Madster and eDonkey2000 were brought down or changed due to similar circumstances In 2000 Factory Records entrepreneur Tony Wilson and his business partners launched an early online music store Music33 which sold MP3s for 33 pence per song 6 The major record labels eventually decided to launch their own online stores allowing them more direct control over costs and pricing and more control over the presentation and packaging of songs and albums Sony Music Entertainment s service did not do as well as was hoped Many consumers felt the service was difficult to navigate and use Sony s pricing of US 3 50 per song track also discouraged many early adopters of the service Furthermore as MP3 Newswire pointed out in its review of the service users were actually only renting the tracks for that 3 50 because the patron did not own the audio file After a certain point the files expired and could not be played again without repurchase The service quickly failed Undaunted the record industry tried again Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment teamed up with a service called Duet later renamed pressplay EMI AOL Time Warner and Bertelsmann Music Group teamed up with MusicNet Again both services struggled hampered by high prices and heavy limitations on how downloaded files could be used once paid for 7 In the end consumers chose instead to download music using illegal free file sharing programs which many consumers felt were more convenient and easier to use Non major label services like eMusic Cductive and Listen com now Rhapsody sold the music of independent labels and artists The demand for digital audio downloading skyrocketed after the launch of Apple s iTunes Store then called iTunes Music Store in April 2003 and the creation of portable music and digital audio players such as the iPod These players enabled music fans to carry their music with them wherever they went Amazon launched its Amazon MP3 service for the US in September 2007 expanding it gradually to most countries where Amazon operates Rise Edit An increasing number of new services appeared in the 2000s that enabled musicians to sell their music directly to fans without an intermediary These type of services usually use e commerce enabled web widgets that embed into many types of web pages This turns each web page into the musician s own online music store Furthermore there had been a boom in boutique music stores that cater to specific audiences 8 On October 10 2007 English rock band Radiohead released the album In Rainbows as a download Listeners were allowed to purchase the album for whatever price they wanted to pay legally allowing them to download the album for free About one third of people who downloaded the album paid nothing with the average price paid being 4 After three months online the album was taken down by the band and released on compact disc CD As of April 2008 update the largest online music store was the iTunes Store with around 80 of the market 9 failed verification On 3 April 2008 the iTunes Store surpassed Wal Mart as the biggest music retailer in the United States a milestone in the music industry as it was the first time in history that an online music retailer exceeded those of physical music formats e g record shops selling CDs In the early 2010s online music stores especially iTunes experienced a marked increase in sales Consumer spending shifted away from the purchase of CDs in favor of purchasing albums from online music stores or more commonly purchasing individual songs The iTunes platform has been the main reason for this shift as it originally sold every song in its library for 99 cents Historically albums would be sold for about five times the cost of a single but iTunes was selling every song for a tenth of the price of an album However in order to increase album sales iTunes instituted Complete My Album which offered a discounted price on the full album when a consumer had already purchased one or more songs Furthermore with the rising popularity of Cyber Monday online music stores have further gained ground over other music distribution sources 10 iTunes rolled out an Instant Gratification instant grat service in which some individual tracks or bonus tracks were made available to customers who have pre ordered albums 11 The instant grat tracks have changed the criteria for the UK Official Charts s singles In 2013 David Bowie s Where Are We Now was not allowed to chart because it was a pre order for the album The Next Day but Official Charts later ruled that effective February 10 2013 certain instant grats could be allowed to appear in the Top 40 12 13 Instant grats have also been offered on other online music stores including Amazon and Spotify 14 Compared to file sharing EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Much controversy surrounds file sharing so many of these points are disputed Advantages of legal online stores Edit The sale of licensed content adheres to copyright laws More consistent and higher quality metadata because the entering of the metadata is more centralized and done with more oversight dubious discuss Music download companies are more accountable to users than creators of file sharing programs A centralized repository of music makes it easier to find the songs you want Notably Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs claimed in his introduction of the iTunes Store that downloading from file sharers is theoretically working for less than minimum wage By spending an hour of your time to save less than four dollars he calculated you re working for less than minimum wage 15 16 Disadvantages of online stores Edit Many major online music stores only offer music in one audio format Most online music stores sell music encoded in a lossy file format compared to an audio CD For the most part music that is sold in lossy MP3 format is not sold at higher bit rate encoding Few online music stores offer music in lossless metadata enabled formats such as FLAC or ALAC but instead stick to WAV files in which no metadata can generally be embedded AIFF files with metadata are offered but in larger size files than FLAC or ALAC without advantage in sound quality In contrast lossless rips of CDs in FLAC format are widely available on the web for illegal downloading Some stores use Digital Rights Management technology which limits the use of music files on certain devices The restrictions vary between different services and sometimes even between different songs from the same service Online stores charge for downloading songs and other content whereas illegal file sharing does not have any fees although illegal song downloaders may face fines and prosecution in some jurisdictions and illegal files may contain computer viruses Internet radio EditOnline music stores receive competition from online radio as well as file sharing Online radio is the free distribution of webcasts on the Internet via streaming Listeners can create customizable stations based on a genre artists or song of their choice Notable Internet Radio service providers are Pandora Last FM and recently Spotify with Pandora being the largest Pandora holds 52 of the market share in Internet radio with over 53 million registered users and almost one billion stations from which users can choose 17 See also EditComparison of digital music stores Music industry Open Music Model InMusic Unsigned band webReferences Edit Maurer Wendy THE DYNAMICS OF MUSIC DISTRIBUTION Archived from the original on 2008 04 29 Retrieved 2008 04 21 Pescovitz David 1995 08 30 It s All Geek to Them Digital Communes Find a Social Scene in Computers Business section The Cutting Edge COMPUTING TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION Los Angeles Times p 1 Archived from the original on 1995 08 30 Retrieved 2008 04 21 27 year old Jon Luini who co founded the hip Internet Underground Music Archive IUMA in 1993 Herskovitz Jon December 2 1999 Sony Japan to sell online Variety Retrieved July 3 2021 インターネットによる邦楽新譜CDシングルタイトル曲の有料音楽配信を開始 Sony Music Entertainment Japan November 30 1999 Retrieved July 3 2021 Sisario Ben 2011 10 03 Rhapsody to Acquire Napster in Deal With Best Buy NYTimes com United States Mediadecoder blogs nytimes com Retrieved 2013 06 13 Dave Simpson 2020 08 10 You ve been smoking too much the chaos of Tony Wilson s digital music revolution The Guardian Retrieved 2020 08 10 Harvey Eric April 2014 Station to Station The Past Present and Future of Streaming Music Pitchfork MusicNet limited listeners to 100 songs per month they were streamable once each or if downloaded they were rendered unplayable after a month Only Pressplay s premium subscription allowed 20 tracks per month to be burned to disc with no expiring downloads Anderson Chris 1 October 2004 The Long Tail Wired Amazon flows into digital music sales theregister co uk Cyber Monday online sales surge by 33 Financial Times 29 November 2011 How an Unsigned Artist Used iTunes Instant Gratification to Get a Top 10 Hit on iTunes 19 June 2014 Instant grat tracks to qualify for chart News Music Week Official Charts rules changed following Bowie controversy 14 February 2013 Danny Bryant Release New Album Revelation This April Isaacson Walter 2011 Steve Jobs Simon and Schuster p 403 ISBN 9781451648539 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Steve Jobs Keynote iTunes Music Store Intro Top streaming services active users U S 2016 2023 Statista Retrieved 2022 01 25 External links EditOff Book The Evolution of Music Online Documentary produced by Off Book web series Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Digital music store amp oldid 1119885586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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