The Danger of Subscription Music Services
I’ve been a happy Rhapsody subscriber for several years now. But some recent deletions from their catalog have made me wonder about the long-term viability of subscription music services.
I pay $10 a month for all the music I want. This is great. New releases usually show up on Rhapsody the day they come out. They have the bulk of major label catalog releases, too. When a great new CD comes out, as you may know from my musicblog at right, I tend to listen to it obsessively and really get attached to it.
Several times over the past few months, new releases have appeared on Rhapsody on their release date, only to be pulled from the catalog a few weeks or months later. Some examples I’ve noticed include the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Fever to Tell and Belle and Sebastian’s Dear Catastrophe Waitress. Other albums I used to listen to a lot that were later pulled include Sondre Lerche’s Faces Down, Jennifer Kimball’s Veering From The Wave, and Chicane’s Behind the Sun.
So, now I have to buy the CDs. There is the possibility here for some very nasty crack-dealer-like licensing behavior on the part of the record companies: they license to subscription services for a while, then pull the album so people who are hooked go out and buy the CDs. Record companies could even repeat this gambit over and over, hooking new subscription-service users then forcing CD purchases each time.
Is that what happened with the albums I listed above? I don’t know. But the possibility that a favorite album could be suddenly unavailable one day on the subscription services greatly reduces their utility.
One thing’s for sure: when I was running Andromeda against 20 GB of MP3s in college (one statute of limitations ago), nothing disappeared from my catalog. I don’t want to have to go back to that.
UPDATE: Matt Graves of Real has responded to this post; his comments are here.
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[...] joegratz.net
9 July 2004
Real Responds
I sent a link to this previous post to Matt Graves, the PR guy fo [...]
Pingback by joegratz.net » Real Responds — July 10, 2004 @ 2:07 am
do you have to pay extra to download each album and burn it?
Comment by Anonymous — July 9, 2004 @ 3:28 pm
You have to pay extra to burn tracks, $0.79 per track. There are no downloads.
(If I didn’t have to pay extra to download and burn tracks, I’d just burn everything I liked for safekeeping.)
Comment by Joe Gratz — July 9, 2004 @ 3:35 pm
No Guarantees with Content Subscriptions
Recently, on Copyfight, there have been a couple of posts about “tethered” music services (A Tale of Two Tethers and RCN’s New Tethered Music Service). In A Tale of Two Tethers, Jason Schultz linked to a NY Times article in…
Trackback by The Importance of... — July 9, 2004 @ 6:03 pm
Content Subscription Shenanigans
Yesterday, I noted some troublesome reports about the Rhapsody music streaming service (No Guarantees with Content Subscriptions). According to Joe Gratz, music was appearing and then disappearing from Rhaspsody (The Danger of Subscription Music Servic…
Trackback by The Importance of... — July 10, 2004 @ 4:00 pm