________________________
Guest post by Cary Sherman, Chairman & CEO, RIAA For the first time in over a decade, we can report that the American music business grew at a healthy rate in the first half of 2016. That growth is propelled by music subscriptions to services like Spotify, Apple, and Tidal on pace to surpass $2 billion by the end of the year.Streaming in all its forms accounted for almost half of all recorded music revenues in the first half of 2016. This represents a remarkable transformation and reinvention by a business that was principally physical products just six years ago.Over the first half of 2016, there were an average of more than 18 million music subscriptions, doubling the 9 million reported at the same time last year. Music subscriptions are now significantly bigger revenue generators than CD sales, and virtually equal to permanent downloads.More than any other creative industry, the music business is leading the digital revolution, adopting and embracing new business models to serve today’s fans. Music drives commerce and culture. It is an essential element of any major technology firm’s consumer platform. Musicians top virtually all social media channels (musicfuels.com) and music frequently drives the trending online conversation. According to Nielsen, there were an astounding 209 billion on-demand music streams in the first half of 2016.Despite the massive consumer demand for music, the damning reality remains that music is fundamentally undervalued, with broken, outdated laws threatening the entire music community and distorting the marketplace. The result? Many services rake in billions of dollars for themselves on the backs of music’s popularity but pay only relative pennies for artists and labels. Pirate sites operate with seeming impunity.One example — does it make any sense that approximately 1000 plays of a song on one streaming service yields dramatically different payouts than a song on a different service that gets to hide behind the failing 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)?


Related articles



