Categories: AudioIndustryMedia

The Day the Music Died

Many, many people have covered this story, but in case you haven’t seen it here, here or here, the Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) has made a significant change in its rate scheme which, if upheld, will result in substantial royalty increases – enough to kill off most Internet music services.

From GigaOM, here’s what Tim Westergren of Pandora had to say:

“Left unchanged, it’s over for us and every other internet radio service, period. Makes it un-viable,” Pandora co-founder Tim Westergren wrote in an email. “We’re staying online because we’re hopeful that sanity will eventually win out. This is a ludicrous ruling.”

Not only is this ruling bad for Internet radio companies (and ultimately for music producers), it’s not great news for some hardware manufacturers either. My much-loved Squeezebox loses much of its appeal if I can’t get a wide range of Internet radio stations on it: Pandora, Radioio, Live365… Yes, Slim Devices recently added Rhapsody to its SqueezeNetwork line-up, but part of the reason I love my Squeezebox is because it doesn’t require onerous monthly fees. I pay $36 for a year of Pandora now that my 90-day free trial is up. I’m not willing to skip up to $9.99 a month for a service that’s less attractive.

Published by
Mari Silbey