Music download
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2011) |
A music download is the transferral of music from an Internet-facing computer or website to a user's local computer. This term encompasses both legal downloads and downloads of copyright material without permission or payment.
Popular online music stores that sell digital singles and albums include the iTunes Store, Amazon MP3, fairsharemusic, eMusic, Google Play, CD Universe, Kazaa, Nokia Music Store, Tune App, TuneTribe, and Xbox Music. Paid downloads are sometimes encoded with Digital Rights Management that restricts copying the music or playing purchased songs on certain digital audio players. They are almost always compressed using a lossy codec (usually MPEG-1 Layer 3, Windows Media, or AAC), which reduces file size and bandwidth requirements. These music resources have been created as a response to expanding technology and needs of customers that wanted easy, quick access to music. Their business models respond to the "digital revolution" by making legal services attractive for users.
As of January 2011, Apple's iTunes Store alone made $1.1 billion of revenue in the first quarter of its fiscal year.[1]
Music downloads offered by artists
Some artists allow downloading their songs from their websites or an online music store, often as a short preview or low-quality sample. As an example, iTunes let you play a short preview of any song to listen to it before buying. This replaces listening to music in a store before purchase. Others embed services in their sites that handle single or album purchases. According to research by the website TorrentFreak, 38% of Swedish artists supports file downloading and claim that it helps in early career stages. The Swedish rock group Lamont has profited from file sharing.[2]
Challenges to legal music downloads
Even legal music downloads have faced a number of challenges from artists, record labels and the Recording Industry Association of America. In July 2007, the Universal Music Group decided not to renew their long-term contracts with iTunes. This legal challenge[clarification needed] was primarily based upon the issue of pricing of songs, as Universal wanted to be able to charge more or less depending on the artist, a shift away from iTunes' standard—at the time—99 cents per song pricing. Many industry leaders feel that this is only the first of many show-downs between Apple Inc. and the various record labels.[3]
RIAA against illegal downloading
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) oversees about 85% of real music production with distribution and manufacturing in the United States. They work to protect musicians while supporting the First Amendment rights. Their stated goal is to support artists' creativity and help them not be cheated out of money by illegal downloading.[4] The Recording Industry Association of America launched its first lawsuits on 8 September 2003, against individuals who illegally downloaded music files from the Kazaa FastTrack network. Two years after it began, the campaign survived at least one major legal challenge.[citation needed] The RIAA said it filed 750 suits in February 2006[5] against individuals downloading music files without paying for them in hopes of putting an end to Internet music piracy. The RIAA hopes their campaign will force people to respect the copyrights of music labels and eventually minimize the number of illegal downloads.[6][7]
Chart inclusion
United States
Billboard first tracked legal music downloads in 1993 [citation needed], but this monitoring and reporting did not gain mainstream acceptance in the United States until around February 2005, when the Billboard Hot 100 and other Billboard charts began including digital single sales. The year before, the Hot 100 chart was based on two component charts: The Hot 100 Singles Sales chart (physical sales) and the Hot 100 Airplay. Inclusion of digital singles, as seen in the Hot Digital Songs as a third component chart to the Hot 100 has immensely helped many songs chart and peak higher, in some cases in the absence of a radio release.[citation needed]
Single certifications were introduced in February 2005.[citation needed] Songs that sell a certain number of copies are often certified by the RIAA with the permission of the artist and the record company.[citation needed]
United Kingdom
The UK Official Download Chart launched on 1 September 2004, and includes any permanent digital download track under 10 minutes that sells for at least 40p (0.4 GBP).[citation needed] In January 2005, downloaded tracks outsold physical singles for the first time in UK music history,[citation needed] prompting The Official UK Charts Company to begin to incorporate downloads for the first time into the UK Singles Chart on 17 April 2005, at which time Radio 1 stopped broadcasting the separate download chart,[citation needed] although the chart is still compiled. Initially this was on condition that the song must have a physical media release at the same time; this rule was fully lifted on 1 January 2007, meaning all download sales are now eligible in the chart.[citation needed]
Sales records
United States
In November 2005, the record for the best-selling digital single in the United States was held by Gwen Stefani's "Hollaback Girl", which sold over one million downloads, making it the first song to achieve platinum download status.[citation needed] Britney Spears' "Hold It Against Me" marked the most downloads in a first week by a female artist in 2011, beating the previous record held by Taylor Swift's "Today Was a Fairytale" (2010). The current record is held again by Swift, with her 2012 single "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" selling 623,000 downloads in its first week. It also holds the record of biggest digital sales week ever for a song by a woman in history, overtaking Ke$ha's 2010 hit single "Tik Tok" which overall has sold 13.6 million legal downloads worldwide.[citation needed] Overall as of June 2012, the record for the best-selling digital single in the United States on the iTunes Store is held by The Black Eyed Peas's "I Gotta Feeling", which has sold over 8 million downloads.[8][9]
Soon after his death in 2009, Michael Jackson became the first artist to sell over one million download songs in a week.[10]
See also
- Graduated response
- Comparison of online music stores
- On air on sale
- Open Music Model
- United States v. ASCAP
References
- ^ Apple's iTunes revenues top $1.1 billion in Q1, FierceMobileContent 19 January 2011
- ^ "Swedisg artists want to legalize filesharing" 17 October 2011
- ^ Universal in Dispute With Apple Over iTunes
- ^ "For Students Doing Reports". RIAA. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
- ^ Riaa Announces New Round Of Music Theft Lawsuits
- ^ Jason Krause. "Breaking up dowloading". ABA Journal 92 (2006): 16, 18. Research Library. ProQuest. Georgia State University Library, Atlanta, Georgia. 12 November 2008
- ^ Downloading Music: Awful or Average? Sapients.net: 6 July 2011
- ^ "Week Ending June 24, 2012. Songs: Elton & The Peas | Chart Watch (NEW)". Yahoo.com. 27 June 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- ^ "Week Ending March 20, 2011: Songs: The Chris Brown Matter – Yahoo! Chart Watch". Yahoo.com. 23 March 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- ^ http://thenextweb.com/2009/07/02/michael-jackson-sell-1-million-downloads-week/