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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 01:56 AM

Music landmark as billionth download is sold
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
Published:25 February 2006





A global revolution in the music industry was dramatically highlighted yesterday as the world's biggest online music store celebrated its billionth song download.

An unsuspecting 16-year-old from Michigan made history on the iTunes website by downloading Coldplay's "Speed of Sound" - which cost him 99 cents. The landmark purchase edged record companies closer to a new era where online sales threaten to overtake sales of CDs in shops.

The title of the song Alex Ostrovsky chose was also an unwitting reminder of the dizzying pace of change for record companies confronted by new technology and online piracy.

It took the music industry decades to move from the 78 to new formats such as audiotape and CD. Now the pace of change is accelerating and the industry is presented with a bewildering array of opportunities to license and sell its content.

Global music sales have slumped by one-fifth since the Millennium, hit by online piracy and increasing competition from satellite television, mobile phones and computer games. Sales of singles, for so long the most famous music format, have halved in Britain.

By contrast, Apple's online "best jukebox in the world" has been a phenomenal success since its launch in the US just three years ago. By March 2004, iTunes reached 50 million downloads. By July 2005, downloads had increased ten-fold to 500 million and little more than six months later the figure has reached one billion. Apple's chief executive, Steve Jobs said: "I hope that every customer, artist and music company executive takes a moment today to reflect on what we've achieved together during the past three years."

For the music industry, a greater prize awaits executives if they can arrest the decline in sales since the rise of the internet allowed computer users to swap songs for free. For many customers, downloading songs from the internet onto MP3 players has replaced a trip to a record store.

Music companies were slow to wake up to the threat posed by early file-sharing sites like Napster, but have now embraced the new technology and created legal ways to download music. Nevertheless, illegal downloads still dwarf the legal websites. Partly because the record industry now takes court action against file-sharers, the record industry claims the amount of illegal downloads is being "contained". In the UK and Germany the number of people using the legal sites has exceeded the number of pirates for the first time. More singles are now legally downloaded off the internet than bought in shops and downloads will be included in the official singles chart later this year. Apple's iTunes accounts for 70 per cent of legal downloads in the UK and US.

People pay less for legal downloads - six per cent of British music sales - than they do in music shops for CDs. Prices of CDs are falling to encourage people to buy them rather than borrowing friends' and "burning" them onto a blank disc. The surge in British homes getting broadband, which allows songs to be downloaded up to 20 times quicker, is expected to propel sales further. Meanwhile, the music industry is making money from songs downloaded to become mobile phone ring-tones.

Consumers will see big changes in the way they buy music over the next decade, say the music retailers. Shops are planning to install free-standing download units for iPod users who do not have computers or broadbrand or who want to add to the iPods "on the go" while shops will broadcast promotional songs onto the phones of customers.

Kim Bayley of the retailers' organisation Bard, which represents the likes of HMV, Virgin and Amazon, believes physical sales will survive: "The fan just enjoys the packaging a lot of the time. They like to see it and hold it and say: 'This is new U2 album with all the extras'."

For now, the music industry is savouring a victory in its battle to charge for the songs that an individual with basic computer equipment can now access and copy in seconds.

Julian Marshall, the news editor of music magazine NME, said: "People have known for the past five or six years how to get music off the internet but now the music industry has found a way to make money from it."

A dollar well spent for the billionth music downloader

It was the early hours of the morning when the telephone rang in the home of a Michigan teenager, Alex Ostrovsky. He presumed it was a tele-marketer and was preparing to give them a dressing down for ringing at that unholy hour.

Instead, the caller was a representative from Apple, informing the 16-year-old that he had become a footnote to history. Unknown to Alex, 45 minutes earlier - just a little after midnight - he had downloaded the billionth song from Apple's iTunes music store when he had paid 99 cents for Coldplay's "Speed of Sound" from their album X&Y.

"I thought he was a tele-marketer it was so early in the morning. We get calls from people from around the world and they don't really know what the time is," Alex said, speaking from his home in West Bloomfield. "I was really sceptical. I didn't even know there was a competition. But he knew the details of my mum's credit card which I have to use for the iTunes account."

Alex said that until now he has not been a habitual downloader. Indeed, until he got the song from Coldplay's third album in the early hours of Thursday morning, he had probably downloaded fewer than 50 tracks from the online store and was more used to sharing and swapping CDs with friends. Previous downloads had included tracks by Queen, Foo Fighters and Aerosmith.

But he was motivated to make his historic download after going to a Coldplay gig in Detroit on Wednesday evening where the band was supported by the singer Fiona Apple. Alex and his friends had front-row seats.

In addition to receiving the track, Alex has received an iMac computer, 10 iPods and a $10,000 (£5,700) gift card for the iTunes store from Apple.


A global revolution in the music industry was dramatically highlighted yesterday as the world's biggest online music store celebrated its billionth song download.

An unsuspecting 16-year-old from Michigan made history on the iTunes website by downloading Coldplay's "Speed of Sound" - which cost him 99 cents. The landmark purchase edged record companies closer to a new era where online sales threaten to overtake sales of CDs in shops.

The title of the song Alex Ostrovsky chose was also an unwitting reminder of the dizzying pace of change for record companies confronted by new technology and online piracy.

It took the music industry decades to move from the 78 to new formats such as audiotape and CD. Now the pace of change is accelerating and the industry is presented with a bewildering array of opportunities to license and sell its content.

Global music sales have slumped by one-fifth since the Millennium, hit by online piracy and increasing competition from satellite television, mobile phones and computer games. Sales of singles, for so long the most famous music format, have halved in Britain.

By contrast, Apple's online "best jukebox in the world" has been a phenomenal success since its launch in the US just three years ago. By March 2004, iTunes reached 50 million downloads. By July 2005, downloads had increased ten-fold to 500 million and little more than six months later the figure has reached one billion. Apple's chief executive, Steve Jobs said: "I hope that every customer, artist and music company executive takes a moment today to reflect on what we've achieved together during the past three years."

For the music industry, a greater prize awaits executives if they can arrest the decline in sales since the rise of the internet allowed computer users to swap songs for free. For many customers, downloading songs from the internet onto MP3 players has replaced a trip to a record store.

Music companies were slow to wake up to the threat posed by early file-sharing sites like Napster, but have now embraced the new technology and created legal ways to download music. Nevertheless, illegal downloads still dwarf the legal websites. Partly because the record industry now takes court action against file-sharers, the record industry claims the amount of illegal downloads is being "contained". In the UK and Germany the number of people using the legal sites has exceeded the number of pirates for the first time. More singles are now legally downloaded off the internet than bought in shops and downloads will be included in the official singles chart later this year. Apple's iTunes accounts for 70 per cent of legal downloads in the UK and US.

People pay less for legal downloads - six per cent of British music sales - than they do in music shops for CDs. Prices of CDs are falling to encourage people to buy them rather than borrowing friends' and "burning" them onto a blank disc. The surge in British homes getting broadband, which allows songs to be downloaded up to 20 times quicker, is expected to propel sales further. Meanwhile, the music industry is making money from songs downloaded to become mobile phone ring-tones.


Consumers will see big changes in the way they buy music over the next decade, say the music retailers. Shops are planning to install free-standing download units for iPod users who do not have computers or broadbrand or who want to add to the iPods "on the go" while shops will broadcast promotional songs onto the phones of customers.

Kim Bayley of the retailers' organisation Bard, which represents the likes of HMV, Virgin and Amazon, believes physical sales will survive: "The fan just enjoys the packaging a lot of the time. They like to see it and hold it and say: 'This is new U2 album with all the extras'."

For now, the music industry is savouring a victory in its battle to charge for the songs that an individual with basic computer equipment can now access and copy in seconds.

Julian Marshall, the news editor of music magazine NME, said: "People have known for the past five or six years how to get music off the internet but now the music industry has found a way to make money from it."

A dollar well spent for the billionth music downloader

It was the early hours of the morning when the telephone rang in the home of a Michigan teenager, Alex Ostrovsky. He presumed it was a tele-marketer and was preparing to give them a dressing down for ringing at that unholy hour.

Instead, the caller was a representative from Apple, informing the 16-year-old that he had become a footnote to history. Unknown to Alex, 45 minutes earlier - just a little after midnight - he had downloaded the billionth song from Apple's iTunes music store when he had paid 99 cents for Coldplay's "Speed of Sound" from their album X&Y.

"I thought he was a tele-marketer it was so early in the morning. We get calls from people from around the world and they don't really know what the time is," Alex said, speaking from his home in West Bloomfield. "I was really sceptical. I didn't even know there was a competition. But he knew the details of my mum's credit card which I have to use for the iTunes account."

Alex said that until now he has not been a habitual downloader. Indeed, until he got the song from Coldplay's third album in the early hours of Thursday morning, he had probably downloaded fewer than 50 tracks from the online store and was more used to sharing and swapping CDs with friends. Previous downloads had included tracks by Queen, Foo Fighters and Aerosmith.

But he was motivated to make his historic download after going to a Coldplay gig in Detroit on Wednesday evening where the band was supported by the singer Fiona Apple. Alex and his friends had front-row seats.

In addition to receiving the track, Alex has received an iMac computer, 10 iPods and a $10,000 (£5,700) gift card for the iTunes store from Apple.


African heart, African mind

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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 01:58 AM

Questions....

Does this spell the end of the CD as a music medium?

Is the way we watch TV and Films under threat....with the download revolution?






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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 02:08 AM

The most important part of that peice was the acknowledgement that peer to peer file sharing is still WAAAAAAAAY bigger than legal sites.

If CDs are going out of fashion depends on your tastes. CDs are 44khz and MP3s a lot lower. Any compression kills the quality of music. For the general public this isn't really a concern and they gladly take on the chopped up sound. For me... no. I still like CD sound and prefferably vinyl (better bass response).

By and large I think the CD industry is dead though. Unless you talking BLANK CDs lol. Everything these days is CHOICE and PERSONAL. People like making their own stuff and having control over what they listen to like that.


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 11:24 AM

Black Power: definately agree with you about TV...I think its definately going to end up with us downloading particular programmes rather than living by the TV schedules..you can almost see that starting to happen with PODCASTS...

Like you I haven't bought a CD in years and in fact I'd never ever buy a CD again, its a complete con...imagine it costs something like 50p to make and we're buying samething for £15....that aint right...and what used to really piss me off..is that often you'd get two maybe three tracks worth listening and the other 9/10 were complete crap...so essentially you'd be conned to spend £15 on a CD single..rip off..


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 11:28 AM


If the CD is dead then its about time too.


Marked for death next is the TV in its current form. Why would I want to watch a show when some spotty, unconnected, neurotic scheduler decides? Why can't I download the show and watch it whenever I want?

Also why is it that because is live in UK I can't get access to quality US shows? Why the hell do channel4 buy Raymond, which is complete crap, when theres much better US sh*t out there?

As long as the industry keeps dragging their feet then I can carry on getting free downloads...

boondocks
dave chappellle
curb your enthusiam
over there
extras

I don't hardly watch TV except for the news these days.





"I roll with Shaheed and the brotha Abstract" - Phife

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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 11:38 AM

Stick Up...you're soo right.....about the TV thing.....Why am i waiting until march/april to watch a show like LOST..when the entire show is already been on in the USA...that ridiculous....the same with films...why are we putting up with this zone nonsense...

The film industry complain about piracy..but if they insist on showing films in one part of the globe first then they will continue to feed the market for this activity...and i think its really going to be interesting when High definition TV takes hold..because i really think then this industry is going to have a big problem....very big...

It used to be the difference between Pirate stuff and the original was the quality...but that isn't even the case no more..with technology racing ahead....I have found it hard to tell the two apart sometimes imagine whats going to happen when they show films in the USA....before they are released here...I tell you them people are stupid..


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 12:09 PM

I buy alot fewer cds.I tend to buy best of compliations and jazz.That's it.I want Coltrane/Mingus/Miles on a cd.I like the aesthetics.

TV/radio is another story.I watch the local station for the 30 minutes news in the morning and that it.Downloading shows.Not sure as of yet.


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 12:48 PM

Agree with DM on the music CD issue - it depends on your tastes. If you're into mass-marketed music, then buying CDs has been questionable for years....if you like non-mainstream stuff (as I do), then downloading often works alongside buying CDs - sample a track or two, then get the album if you like what you hear - it's the collector mentality...People were saying that vinyl would die when CDs became popular....hasn't happened yet. Though like others, I've bought fewer CDs in recent times, never play them at home unless I want to record, and make up mp3 compilations for the car....

On TV/film....not as big a consumer of these, but no doubt change will come in the marketplace as a whole. How much this takes off will depend to some extent on the availability and cost of broadband - can't imagine downloading a movie through dial-up. Like the idea of being able to access something specific on some kind of online library, but in most cases doubt that I'd want to keep it in the way that I'd keep music....


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 02:40 PM

God it had to be a Coldplay tune*groans*,I hope that teenager will now be ostracized for his bad taste.



Kunjufu,CD's dont cost 15bux anymore do they?When I worked at Tower records in the late 90's new releases used to be in the 17-19 buck range(pounds! ZOIKS),complete rip off,thank God for the employee discount at the time.

Can't remember the last new CD I bought but usually they are about 8.99 at Tesco,but I only ever buy them if I want the liner notes.

The last CD's I purchased were Black Urhuru and Kaiser Chiefs and they were both off E-Bay for 5.99.


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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 03:13 PM

Definately with TV

Everybody Hates Chris, Nip/Tick, OC, Smallville, Desperate Housewives, Lost, Prison Break are all downloaded.

Gonna get all of Chappelles show as well


As for music

Depends. If I like the artist on a personal and professional leevl I will buy it officially, cos that way he can make paper, no matter how samll the cut is

Otherwise, he aint gonna make shit



You ever heard of the Golden Rule. He who has the gold makes the rules!

He who asks is a fool for five minutes. He who never asks remains a fool for ever.
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Post imported post - 25-02-06, 03:18 PM

CashMoney wrote:
Quote:
Definately with TV

Everybody Hates Chris, Nip/Tick, OC, Smallville, Desperate Housewives, Lost, Prison Break are all downloaded.

Gonna get all of Chappelles show as well


As for music

Depends. If I like the artist on a personal and professional leevl I will buy it officially, cos that way he can make paper, no matter how samll the cut is

Otherwise, he aint gonna make sh*t
Well it will get to the point where artists do not make diddly-squat on CD's or downloads,they will become mere promotional tools.
Quote:
The money will be made from non-stop touring and merchandizing and you can expect tickect prices for top artists to be in the region of £100 pounds in about 4 years,if that long.


I aint asking for nothing,just open the door and i\'ll take it myself-James Brown.