Skip to main content

Mumford & Sons, Jay Z cross swords in streaming spar over Tidal

mumford and sons dont like tidal
s_bukley / Shutterstock.com
Tidal, the Jay Z-backed hi-fidelity streaming service, now has its first celebrity haters. Arena folk rockers Mumford & Sons weren’t invited to represent the artist-owned streaming service, and they’re glad.

“We wouldn’t have joined it anyway, even if they had asked,” frontman Marcus Mumford told the The Daily Beast. “We don’t want to be tribal. I think small bands should get paid more for it… when they say it’s artist-owned, it’s owned by those rich, wealthy artists.”

They’re not exaggerating. After Jay Z bought the streaming music service for $56 million last month, he brought on well-known artists like Rihanna, Kanye West, Beyonce and Jack White as co-owners (and announced the partnership in grand fashion).

But, we also wouldn’t expect a superstar musician to call fellow big-name musicians who participated in the launch ceremony “new school fucking plutocrats.” Yes, those were the words out of Mumford & Sons guitarist’s Winston Marshall.

That being said, they believe in the power of technology and streaming music. “We don’t want to be part of some Tidal ‘streaming revolution’ nor do we want to be Taylor Swift and be anti-it,” said Marshall. “I don’t understand her argument, either… Music is changing. This is how people are going to listen to music now — streaming.”

It’s nice that Mumford & Sons believe in the little guys but keep in mind that they’re superstars themselves. Their last LP, Babel, sold 2.6 million copies in the US, they regularly headline on the festival circuit and they’re more famous than most bands dream to be.

Tidal’s usefulness (which, by the way, costs $20 per month for hi-fidelity music streaming) is still up in the air, but now we’re sure that the English folk rockers won’t join the bandwagon. And, they probably won’t be hanging with Jay Z anytime soon either.

Editors' Recommendations

Chris Leo Palermino
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chris Leo Palermino is a music, tech, business, and culture journalist based between New York and Boston. He also contributes…
Five years on, Jay-Z’s Tidal is still fighting to make waves
Tidal Owners: Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, Daft Punk

Imagine a cool, zeitgeist-capturing brand with a streaming music service co-owned by one of the biggest names in hip-hop history, which attracts the support of major celebrities, while rapidly ascending to the promised land of multibillion-dollar valuations.

Is this the story of streaming music service Tidal? No. It's the story of Beats, actually: The Dr. Dre co-founded company, which sold to Apple in 2014 with a $3 billion price tag every bit as cool as the headphones it made, seen around the necks of stars like LeBron James and Michael Phelps.

Read more
Tidal brings Dolby Atmos Music to home theater systems
TV showing Tidal app and Dolby Atmos Music.

Dolby Atmos Music, which offers an ultra-immersive sound experience, will start rolling out today to Tidal subscribers' home theater speaker systems, Dolby Laboratories and Tidal announced Thursday.

Support for these new devices will be rolling out over the next few days via an update to the Tidal app. You can get Dolby Atmos on your home theater system if you have a Dolby Atmos A/V receiver (and the necessary speakers) or a Dolby Atmos-capable soundbar and a compatible media streamer.

Read more
Amazon Music HD offers hi-res streaming for a lot less than Tidal
tidal vs spotify audio technica m50xbt headphones mem 2

Looks like those rumors that Amazon was planning a hi-res music tier for its Amazon Music service were true: Today the company has announced Amazon Music HD, an upgraded tier for Amazon Music Unlimited that features both lossless CD-quality streams for over 50 million tracks, and millions of better-than-CD, hi-res quality tracks.

Amazon's new service is substantially similar to Tidal's HiFi subscription tier but with one very big difference: Amazon is only charging $13 per month for Prime members, or $15 per month for non-Prime members. Tidal's HiFi service costs $20 per month.

Read more