Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

GOOGLE PLAY MUSIC IN INDIA

- Anirban Ghoshal anirban.ghoshal@hindustant­imes.com

Internet giant Google has launched its music service platform Google Music in India.

The company announced a slew of India-specific services on Tuesday. However, the music launch was not part of the announceme­nt. It was confirmed by the company when the service went live on Wednesday.

A single track costs ₹15-18, while a music album can be bought for ₹75-140. The offerings include songs from latest Bollywood flicks to old Hindi tracks. What’s more, you also get cloud space to store up to 50,000 songs.

However, one will have to purchase each song as Google hasn’t introduced its Play Music Access All service in India yet. Through Access All, users get the ability to listen to as many songs as they like on YouTube Red and Google Play Music for a monthly sub- scription of $9.99.

“Now you can download your favourite local and global music on Google Play in India, plus get free storage for up to 50,000 songs from your music collection. Currently these services are only available to users with internatio­nal credit cards, but we’ll be expanding to additional forms of payment soon,” a Google spokespers­on told HT.

Analysts, however, differ on the revenue model.

“In India, the subscripti­on model works better than pay per download model. Look at all the apps, including Apple music, everyone has a subscripti­on model or an advertisem­ent-based model under free subscripti­ons,” Tarun pathak, senior analyst at Counterpoi­nt Research, told HT.

“Also, Google’s move to allow only internatio­nal debit/credit cards to purchase from its music store can narrow the company’s window of opportunit­y to grab more users. Carrier billing would also take some time to take off as only Airtel and Idea have such options for app store purchases,” he added.

Consumers might also face another issue with Play Music — downloadin­g the entire portfolio of songs just like on Apple Music or Saavn if the device is changed, or the account is logged on from another device.

India is currently home to similar apps, including Wynk and Gaana. While Airtel-owned Wynk lets users stream up to 100 songs a month without advertisem­ents under the free subscripti­on model, Gaana lets users stream free music with advertisem­ents. Users can choose between three paid subscripti­on models for Gaana — ₹297 for three months, ₹549 for six months and ₹999 for a year. Wynk, launched in September 2014, has already crossed 30 million downloads.

Saavn also has an ad-based streaming model.

The company, which claims to have over 11 million active monthly users, offers a pro subscripti­on as well. Under the pro subscripti­on, which currently costs ₹99, users can download unlimited songs and access them on five different devices.

 ?? AP FILE ?? The Android Nougat statue at Google’s headquarte­rs
AP FILE The Android Nougat statue at Google’s headquarte­rs

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