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Guest post by Cherie Hu of GetRevueAs many of you may know firsthand, so much of growth and success in the entertainment business is about the right timing. I am 100% a beneficiary of timing. I feel extremely fortunate to have started writing about the intersection of music and technology just as those two worlds were starting to warm up to each other again, with respect to partnerships, investments and deals—as opposed to the early 2000s, when the music business was highly critical of Napster and other technologies, treating them largely as scapegoats for their own problems.My first-ever article about music/tech was published in Forbes on November 5, 2015. In just the ten months leading up to that date,- Spotify had unveiled Discover Weekly, changing how we understand music recommendation and discovery;
- Apple Music, Tidal and YouTube Music had all launched, crowding the streaming subscription landscape even further;
- Pandora had acquired both Next Big Sound and Ticketfly, purportedly making the case for a digital music ecosystem that merged live and streaming data (although both Pandora and Ticketfly ultimately faced much different fates), and
- Two brand-new accelerators and incubators—the Nashville Entrepreneur Center’s Project Music and the historic Abbey Road Studios’ Abbey Road Red—had launched to the public, fostering new infrastructure for bridging the gap between local music and tech communities.