Jay Z has made his $56 million move. Apple is at work attempting to crush the competition. Spotify racks up hundreds of millions of dollars in additional funding. YouTube does little except maintain its audience of 1 billion viewers.
Every player in music streaming wants a piece of the $1.9 billion business, which made up 27 percent of record-industry revenues last year, according to the Recording Industry Association of America. With iTunes-style downloads and CDs plunging, the battle for streaming’s Iron Throne is well underway. Rolling Stone has gone through all the players and ranked the Top 5. Here are the ones to look to for the future of online music.
5. Jay Z (Tidal)
The superstar rapper and entrepreneur made a splash last month when he bought the previously little-known Swedish streaming service Tidal for $56 million. Tidal had previously been an also-ran in the streaming wars, but Jay invited the world’s biggest music stars, including Beyonce, Rihanna, Madonna, Alicia Keys, Daft Punk and members of Coldplay, the White Stripes and Arcade Fire, to run the suddenly splashy company with him.
The artists pledge to fix the streaming business so it pays more royalties to those who make the music, but Tidal hasn’t outlined exactly how it will achieve this — Vania Schlogel, a senior executive, says it’s simply a matter of not offering the service for free. Will that be enough? We’ll see, especially after Apple launches competitor Beats.
4. Lucian Grainge (Universal Music Group)