Daily Dispatch

US streaming boom lifts music industry

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SONG streaming on subscripti­on services more than doubled in the US last year, bringing solid growth to the music industry despite sagging album sales.

Analytical firm BuzzAngle Music said consumptio­n by the world’s largest music market rose 4.9% last year, led by a surge of streams of individual tracks.

Streaming services, which offer unlimited on-demand music online, have grown rapidly in recent years and brought new growth to a long-stagnant industry.

The 2016 data offered additional good news for the industry – more people are paying to subscribe to services such as Spotify, Apple Music and Tidal, rather than choosing advertisin­gplatforms such as Spotify’s free tier that are frowned upon by record labels.

US listeners streamed songs more than 191 billion times in 2016 through subscripti­on services, growing an impressive 124.3% from a year earlier.

More than 76% of audio streams last year were through subscripti­ons, well up from 62% a year earlier.

Album sales by download and CD both tumbled in 2016.

One bright point was sales of vinyl albums, which jumped nearly 26%, although they still represente­d a sliver of the market.

Canadian rapper Drake’s Views was by far the top album of 2016 when factoring in streaming, although British balladeer Adele’s 25 edged it out when looking only at direct sales.

The music industry has largely embraced streaming and forecasts robust future growth.

Some artists are less enthusiast­ic, however, saying streaming proceeds cannot ensure sustainabl­e livelihood­s except for top stars. — AFP

 ?? Picture: iSTOCK ?? ONLINE SURGE: US listeners streamed songs more than 191 billion times in 2016 through subscripti­on services, growing an impressive 124.3% from a year earlier
Picture: iSTOCK ONLINE SURGE: US listeners streamed songs more than 191 billion times in 2016 through subscripti­on services, growing an impressive 124.3% from a year earlier

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