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Will Microsoft's Streaming Music Service Hinder Spotify US Release?

Written by Dana Oshiro / July 20, 2009 9:44 AM / 5 Comments

spotify_music_jul09.jpgUS audiences are in for a listening treat. It turns out that Swedish on-demand streaming music service Spotify is set to officially launch to US audiences in the late Summer. Up until now, Spotify's American fans have either had to use foreign proxy servers to access the service or they've simply gone without. The service is currently available in the UK, Sweden, Norway, Spain, France and Finland. Despite only being available in a select few countries, Spotify already has more than 5 million users and is often mentioned as a competitor to Grooveshark and Imeem.

By working with labels to negotiate music licensing and revenue models, the company hopes to provide audiophiles with one of the largest legal streaming music services to date. European deals with major labels including Universal, Sony, Warner and EMI have helped solidify this mission, and with 5 million current files, the company is well on its way. As with most streaming music services, much of Spotify's success in the US will depend on their ability to solidify US licensing deals and monetize via a premium ad-free service.

According to Forbes journalist, Javier Espinoza, "Another looming threat [to Spotify]: Microsoft is launching a very similar music streaming service later in July, a service that also allows users to download the music, something Spotify still won't allow members to do." Nevertheless, the question is, will Microsoft be able to provide cross-format support and separate itself from its lackluster music devices in order to build a site that consumers will enjoy? If it can't, Spotify will have nothing to worry about.

Besides, in late June, Spotify co-founder Daniel Ek made the following statement to the Register, " We're working on a one-click download solution with 7Digital, press buy, press OK and you buy a recording. My hope is to get it out in the next couple of months."

Demonstrated at Google's late May I/O conference, Spotify's Android already caches music for easy offline play. An iPhone app version is already reportedly in the works.

If you can play all of your favorite music from your cached play list, how important is it for the average user to have the access to the original file? Below is a look at the current Android app, let us know your listening habits in the comments below.



Comments

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  1. I guess it depends on what MS releases, no one has seen this so-called "Spotify killer" that they plan to launch before then end of the month. If it's as good as the Zune Spotify should worry. :)

    Posted by: Adam | July 20, 2009 10:21 AM



  2. Spotify should not worry. Grooveshark is not legal and sued. Microsoft has no licenses and will for sure not launch this year.

    Posted by: Hans | July 20, 2009 1:05 PM



  3. Either of these are fine if you want to listen to music while you are on the computer, but what if you want to download it onto a portable, without paying? Sorry, streaming is lame, and paying is worse. I'll wait for the launch of Qtrax- 100% free and legal downloads, plus millions of songs? Who can beat that??

    Posted by: Wayne | July 20, 2009 5:48 PM



  4. Thanks for posting, I really enjoyed your most recent post. I think you should post more often, you obviously have natural ability for blogging!

    Posted by: niu | July 22, 2009 10:55 PM



  5. I love the concept of Spotify for discovering new music and listening to new albums, but I’m different from you in the sense that I like to listen to some music for quite a long time, and don’t need to constantly change it. For this reason, a streaming service just seems disadvantageous because of the whole “if they disappear, all the music is gone” reason.

    Posted by: folic acid | December 14, 2009 4:47 AM



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