ASAP Ferg Details New Album Featuring Skrillex, Missy Elliott, Ty Dolla Sign

A$AP Ferg has released details about his upcoming album, Always Strive and Prosper. The album is due out April 22nd via A$AP Worldwide, Polo Grounds, RCA, and features appearances by Skrillex, Missy Elliott, Chuck D, Ty Dolla $ign, and Rick Ross. Also appearing on the album will be previously

Hear Blake Shelton’s Uplifting ‘Friends’ from the ‘Angry Birds’ Movie

Blake Shelton’s latest single “Came Here to Forget” describes the act of seeking a physical connection as a way to mitigate the pain of heartbreak, with the narrator icily distant from the object of his advances. On the other hand, “Friends” — Shelton’s song for the forthcoming animated Angry Birds…

Linking to Pirate Content Copyright Isn’t Illegal, EU Court Rules

Is Linking To Pirate Content Copyright Infringement?

The advocate general Melchior Wathelet is the individual behind this notion.

The opinion was raised due to an ongoing case between Playboy and a Dutch web page GeenStijl.nl.  The Dutch site linked to leaked Playboy photos that were hosted on a file-hosting site File-factory, back in 2011.  Playboy successfully requested removal of the photos from File-factory, but the issue rose when GeenStijl.nl responded by linking to other public sources where the content was available.

Now, the Dutch court is requesting that the links be seen as ‘communication to the public,’ and are asking the EU Court of Justice whether this action can be seen as copyright infringement or not.  The role of the EU Court of Justice is to analyze and interpret EU legislation and ensure that it is the same across all European countries.  Often courts call of them to seek advice on particular cases.

The Dutch court is trying to establish whether the action by GeenStijl.nl is copyright infringement or not, which raises the question…

Is linking the same as making the content available, or does the blame fall with the original uploader?

In Wathelet’s opinion, linking is not the same as making the content available and the blame does lie with the original uploader.  Though, this advice is currently only relevant to this case in particular, despite it being popular belief that this is going to be a landmark ruling in the near future.

A final ruling will be issued later this year.

 

(Image by Cédric Puisney, Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic, cc by 2.o)

The post Linking to Pirate Content Copyright Isn’t Illegal, EU Court Rules appeared first on Digital Music News.

Kesha Rape And Abuse Claims Dismissed By Judge

Kesha’s rape and abuse claims against Dr. Luke have been dismissed by a New New York Supreme Court judge. In a 27-page decision, seven of eight of Kesha’s claims against Dr. Luke were dismissed. New York Supreme Court Justice Shirley Kornreich, “also rejected Kesha’s request to amend her complaint,

The Inevitable Unbundling Of Streaming Music Platforms

1One of the obstacles to successfully monetizing streaming stems from the challenge of getting a more casual music listener to shell out $10 a month for extra music they don’t especially want, but by offering a greater variety of payment tiers, more fans might be willing to pay for streaming.

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Guest Post by Bas Grasmayer, from the MUSIC x TECH x FUTURE weekly mailing

The launch of Soundcloud’s new premium tier signals the arrival of yet another $10 all-you-can-eat streaming service in an already crowded space. While many people in the music business are happy that they found a way forward, and a way to survive, they’re also worried. As Mark Mulligan pointed out, this represents a pivot. People are concerned that, in having to compete with the established music streaming services, Soundcloud’s indie nature will get snowed under. It’s also not something that people were really waiting for: Soundcloud has always been different, so they expected something different, rather than more of the same.

There are structural problems facing the music streaming status quo right now:

  • Premium users are capped at $10 / month, while they might be willing to spend more;
  • The most casual listeners, who used to buy CDs occasionally, are only monetized through ads;
  • There are no good options between $0 and $10, so we’re failing to monetize a large segment.

The concern: tiers with lower prices cannibalise the full premium tiers. The fact that this is a concern highlights that the industry already knows that the premium tier’s pricing is the product of artificial scarcity, rather than than the addressing of consumers’ needs. You can drop the “cannibalise” phrase and translate it to: “if users can get what they want by paying less, we can no longer force them to pay more for subscriptions that include things they don’t want”. If this sounds familiar, you’re probably thinking of those releases on iTunes where you have to buy the whole album to get a single track.

These are strategies you may choose to pursue and they can work, kind of.
I believe we deserve something better.

2The idea: unbundle feature sets and types of content. Introduce a $1 price tier for something very simple, like getting to offline sync 3 releases each day. This helps you establish a monetary relation with users and gets casual listeners used to paying for music. It opens up possibilities for upselling: sync extra releases for another $1, a radio app for another $2 per month, full on-demand access to music & videos from your favourite label or set of artists, a playlist building game, Tinder-style dating for music lovers, whatever – countless possibilities. Not only does it open up the way for getting value out of poorly monetized segments, it also gives you a competitive advantage when you can monopolize specific behaviours around music

For a while, Spotify seemed to be heading there with its app platform, but I guess they couldn’t clear it with the labels or it was too much of a distraction, since they have to compete with Google (and later Apple) with ‘infinite’ war chests.
What’s next: new formats are creating new opportunities. There are exciting trends in audiovisual experiences, particularly driven by virtual and augment reality, that offer great opportunities for new platforms to emerge, existing platforms to expand, and new monetization models to be pioneered. It means we shouldn’t make the same mistake twice: the music streaming status quo solves one thing for $0 to $10 per user and that is piracy. What comes next will be more feature-intensive formats that are harder to pirate, so we can create a new monetization on top. Perhaps we don’t need all-you-can-eat tiers for this.

As a sidenote: when I was Product Lead at Zvooq, a large music streaming service in Russia & CIS, we pursued an unbundled multi-app strategy. We made a $1 and $2 tier app called Fonoteka. We couldn’t get all the major labels on board immediately, but last I heard, the team there managed to get it done. It’s good to see there is room for experimentation with these models, and hopefully we’ll see this move from developing markets with high piracy / low monetization rates, to key markets where the online music landscape is already more developed in terms of revenue.

Watch Fifth Harmony’s Sultry, Stripped-Down ‘Ex’s and Oh’s’ Cover

Fifth Harmony delivered a stunning, intricately layered cover of Elle King’s “Ex’s and Oh’s” during an appearance on the BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge Thursday.

The group’s full appearance is available to watch, with their cover of “Ex’s and Oh’s” starting at the 8:34 mark. The quintet traded vocal duties during the…