| |
|
|
Posted: 31 Jan 2010 9:53 PM
|
|
|
The Future of Music Retail - Introduction
2 Significant music-related things happened for me in 2009. Firstly, I signed up for the Premium version of streaming service - Spotify ; secondly, I finally succumbed to Apple and bought into the iPhone smartphone. I have several discarded MP3 players and iPods which have somewhat fallen into disuse as I found it a burden to carry around so many devices. The fact that the iPhone comes with iTunes / iPod functionality means that I now always have a subset of my music collection with me (circa 300 albums). However! Neither Spotify or iTunes combined come anywhere close to meeting my broad musical tastes - they just don’t quite cover the range. Moreover, I am still quite captivated by solid formats; I like the ownership of something tangible, the smell of freshly printed vinyl sleeves, the artwork and cover notes. So I end up syncing playlists on Spotify for offline use, buying some music from iTunes , but still largely buying CDs for albums and Vinyl 12"s for singles. In the meantime, the Internet has evolved a vast array of Music-related services, as we will see:
Solid Format Online Music Retail
If you are buying traditional music formats online, you are most likely buying from either Amazon or Play.com or HMV or even Tower Records . All have excellent retail catalogue functionality, with Amazon setting the standard for enhanced features, related recommendations and notifications. The holy grail for Online Retail really is automated cross-selling - that is to say - encouraging discovery of like artists and music by way of recommendations and notifications. Most sites now feature ’Customers who bought / liked this also bought / liked this ...’. You are encouraged to set and refine your preferences, with which the site builds a profile to send you notifications for related offers. I use a number of dance specialists sites, including Juno , Phonica , Boomkat , HTFR , Decks.de and HHV.de ; niche music sites Rough Trade , Discovery Records , Piccadilly Records , Music Non Stop and Norman Records ; moreover, I also use specialist music marketplaces (think of them as dedicated eBay-like retail platforms) - Discogs and GEMM . These are my key resources for buying music, and because of my broad tastes, I often end up using upwards of 20 different retail...
More
|
Tags:
apple,
blogs,
community media,
Media,
MySpace,
player,
social media,
youtube,
music,
MP3 Player,
Audio,
Affino,
iPhone,
Amazon,
iTunes,
HMV,
Spotify,
BBC,
iPod,
Play.com,
Tower Records,
Juno,
Phonica,
Boomkat,
HTFR,
Decks.de,
HHV.de.,
Rough Trade,
Discovery Records,
Piccadilly Records,
Normans Records,
Music-Non-Stop,
Discogs,
GEMM,
Napster,
Beatport,
Pandora,
MySpace Music,
Lala,
Rhapsody,
Grooveshark,
Google Apps,
Levi's,
Glee,
Vimeo,
Metacafe,
Dailymotion,
MTV,
Musu.tv,
Music.com,
Muvids.com,
Opendisc,
MusicDNA,
CMX,
MXP4,
AllMusic,
MusicBrainz,
Music-Map,
Metacrtitic,
Last.fm,
Bjork.com,
Digital Music,
MP3
|
Add Comments
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Subscribe to feed
Subscribe by email
|
|