Skip to main content

Music labels want less free music on Spotify

spotify luring new users with 1 dollar promotion tips
Image used with permission by copyright holder
If you’re not paying Spotify $10 a month, the record labels want to put a squeeze on the amount of free music you listen to, according to new reports. Executives at the major studios are concerned that ad-supporting ‘freemium’ streaming just isn’t raking in enough cash for artists and others in the industry working to support them.

It’s a refrain we’ve heard repeated many times in recent months: In November, Taylor Swift called Spotify a “grand experiment” that she wasn’t willing to contribute her music to. Then a report earlier this year suggested as little as 6.8 percent of streaming music revenues make it to artists (mostly thanks to the labels). And there are rumors that Apple’s attempt to launch a cheaper streaming service has been rebuffed by the industry’s big players.

Now the Financial Times is reporting that Universal Music Group (the largest of the record labels) is renegotiating with Spotify — and it wants tighter restrictions on the amount of music users can access for free. For Universal, the ideal scenario is every Spotify user becoming a subscriber. “Ad-funded on-demand is not going to sustain the entire ecosystem of the creators as well as the investors,” said company CEO Lucian Grainge recently.

Universal isn’t the only label having second thoughts, according to Rolling Stone. “We need to accelerate the growth of paying subscribers — that’s a slightly more positive way of saying we need to limit free,” said one of the sources quoted in the article. “You can make the subscription service more attractive, with high-resolution sound or exclusive albums, or you can make the free version worse, by limiting the amount of stuff you can listen to.”

The number of users tuning in via streaming services continues to rise, but if you listen to music through Spotify, Rdio, Deezer or one of the other services without paying, make the most of it while you can — it sounds like you’ll be facing tighter restrictions in the near future.

Editors' Recommendations

David Nield
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
Spotify gets first major redesign in 10 years with TikTok-like scroll
The new Spotify home screen.

Spotify held its second annual Stream On event for creators today, and while the streamer didn't announce the coming of its hi-res music tier, it took the opportunity to lift the veil off its biggest redesign in a decade. The revamp not only brings a new scrolling, image-heavy, interactive visual look reminiscent of TikTok and Instagram to the mobile app's Home page, but there are several new discovery-based features for music, podcasts, and audiobooks.

While the Stream On event had a major focus on new tools and resources for music artists, podcasters, and audiobook creators, the beginning of the presentation was big on the new look and features for users -- some that will be available to everyone and some to subscribers only. The biggest change comes to the Home screen, which takes the old layout of album artwork and static images and brings it to life with video clips, audio previews of songs, playlists, albums, podcast episodes, and more.

Read more
Apple Music Sing brings karaoke singalongs to iPhones, Apple TV
Apple Music Sing.

Apple wants you to sing like everyone's listening with its new Apple Music Sing feature, a karaoke mode that works with the music streaming service's popular lyrics experience.

Available later this month on iPhone (11 and later), iPads (third-gen and later), and the 2022 model of Apple TV 4K (not earlier models, for some reason) to really max out the karaoke experience in living rooms, Apple Music Sing will be incorporated right into the Apple Music app, giving you the option to use a slider to control the volume of the vocals in Apple Music's song library so you can sing along. With the slider, you can tweak the volume to either blend your voice with the singer's or drop them out completely to go solo. Background vocals are also viewable independently from the main vocals for budding backup singers to follow more easily, and a Duet view separates multiple singers' lyrics on opposite sides of the screen.

Read more
Spotify Wrapped 2022: what it is and how to view it
Spotify Wrapped 2022.

For loads of music lovers, the beginning of December is a special time of year when Spotify drops its annual Spotify Wrapped list, a data-derived deep dive into -- for better or worse -- all the good, bad, and embarrassing music we've been cranking into our earholes for the past year. If you're a Spotify devotee, you've likely already gotten their teaser email about this year's list, which usually lands at the end of November or in the first week of December. But if you haven't, no worries, we've got all the details here.
Further reading

Spotify Wrapped 2022 is here: What's your 'listening personality'?
What is Spotify: music, pricing, and features explained
Apple Music vs. Spotify: Which music streamer is the best?
Instafest: How to make your own Spotify festival lineup

Read more