Net music may play to tune of $1.1B

Published: 17 April 1999 y., Saturday
Digital downloading of music, now in its earliest stages, is predicted to hit $1.1 billion in annual sales by 2003, according to a report out Monday. Market research firm Forrester Research says independent record labels and the rise of portable devices capable of playing the widespread MP3 Internet sound files will lead the initial charge. Most major labels have resisted making popular artists available for downloading, citing fears of piracy. The report suggests that albums will give way to singles, compilations and small collections, dubbed "mini-titles." In a survey of 6,700 online users, 34% indicated they_d buy music via download, 27% said they wouldn_t, and 39% weren_t sure. Analyst Mark Hardie says digital piracy concerns voiced by major record labels are a "big smoke screen" to buy time for the labels to understand the market and make plans. In two to three years, Forrester says, top recording artists will be paid, as actors and athletes are, commensurate with what consumers are willing to spend. A top act might command $40 on the release date for a title, while little-known acts, available at any music portal, would get only $11. The report says music companies eventually will settle on digital delivery players (necessary to listen to downloaded sound files) from Sony Music (MagicGate) and Microsoft, which is to announce its audio format, MS Audio, Tuesday in Los Angeles.
Šaltinis: USA TODAY
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Youtube video artists turn heads

A new exhibition at The Guggenheim Museum reveals winners of a worldwide competition of video art submitted via YouTube. more »

Colosseum’s dungeons open to public

Tourists will soon be able to get a gladiator-eye view of Rome’s Colosseum, as the dungeons and the upper third tier of the world's most famous fighting arena open to the public. more »

Nobel Prize for Literature: European Commission President, José Manuel Barroso, congratulates Mario Vargas Llosa

The President of the European Commission said, “With this Nobel Prize, the international community acknowledges the fruitful work of one of the best writers of our times. more »

Commissioner Vassiliou congratulates the cities preselected in Spain for the title of “European Capital of Culture 2016”

At its four-day meeting in Madrid, the selection panel appointed to assess the cities applying to be a European Capital of Culture in 2016 recommended that the following be preselected from a fiercely competitive field: Burgos, Córdoba, Donostia-San Sebastián, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Segovia and Zaragoza. more »

Ancient pre-Inca royals uncovered

Archaeologists in Peru discover a burial site from an ancient civilization that predates the Incas and would have been in existence near the time of Christ. more »

World tango festival in full swing

The World Cup Tango competition gets under way in Buenos Aires. more »

Artist perfects the breast stroke

An amateur artist from St. Petersburg, Russia, offers paintings which she creates with her breasts. more »

Europe's summer culture crop

Summer is the season for cultural festivals. With a bumper harvest of cultural events out there, what better time of year to head off and sample the exceptional places and world-class artists that Europe has to offer? more »

Dalai Lama blesses giant Buddha

The Dalai Lama inaugurates a 106-foot-tall Buddha statue in India's Kashmir. more »

LUX film prize: 3-film shortlist for 2010

Akadimia Platonos, Die Fremde and Illégal were the three films shortlisted on Tuesday for the European Parliament's 2010 LUX film prize, during an event at the Venice International Film Festival. more »