2000s in the music industry

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In the first decade of the 21st century, the rise of digital media on the internet and computers as a central and primary means to record, distribute, store, and play music caused widespread economic changes in the music industry. The rise of digital media with high-speed internet access fundamentally changed the relationships between artists, record companies, promoters, retail music stores, the technology industry, and consumers. The rise of digital music consumption options contributed to several fundamental changes in consumption. One significant change in the music industry was the remarkable decline of conventional album sales on CD and vinyl. With the à la carte sales models increasing in popularity, consumers no longer downloaded entire albums but rather chose single songs.

Contents

The initial stage (from approximately 1998 to 2001) of the digital music revolution was the emergence of peer-to-peer (P2P) networks that allowed the free exchange of music files (such as Kazaa and Napster). By 2001, the cost of hard drive space had dropped to a level that allowed pocket-sized computers to store large libraries of music. The iPod and iTunes system for music storage and playback became immensely popular, and many consumers began to transfer their physical recording media (such as CDs) onto computer hard drives. The iTunes Music Store offered legal downloads beginning in 2003, and competitors soon followed, offering a variety of online music services, such as internet radio. Digital music distribution was aided by the widespread acceptance of broadband in the middle of the decade. At the same time, recording software (such as Avid's Pro Tools) began to be used almost exclusively to make records, rendering expensive multitrack tape machines (such as the 1967 Studer) almost obsolete.

The chief economic impact of these changes was a dramatic decline in revenues from recorded music. In the 21st century, consumers spent far less money on recorded music than they had in 1990s, in all formats. Total revenues for CDs, vinyl, cassettes and digital downloads in the U.S. dropped from a high of $14.6 billion in 1999 to $9 billion in 2008. The popularity of internet music distribution had increased and by 2007 more units were sold over the internet than in any other form. [1] However, as The Economist reported, "paid digital downloads grew rapidly, but did not begin to make up for the loss of revenue from CDs." [2] The 2000s period stands in stark contrast from the "CD boom" of 1984–1995, when profit margins averaged above 30% and industry executives were notorious for their high profile, even frivolous spending. [3] The major record labels consistently failed to heed warnings or to support any measures that embraced the change in technology. [3] In the early years of the decade, the industry fought illegal file sharing, successfully shutting down Napster in 2001 and threatening thousands of individuals with legal action. This failed to slow the decline in revenue and was a public relations disaster. [3] Some academic studies had even suggested that downloads were not the true cause of the decline. [4]

The turmoil in the industry changed the balance of power among all the various players. The major music-only stores such as Tower Records (which once wielded considerable influence in the industry) went bankrupt in 2006, replaced by box stores (such as Wal-Mart and Best Buy). Recording artists began to rely primarily on live performances and merchandise for their income, which in turn made them more dependent on music promoters such as Live Nation (which dominates tour promotion and owns a large number of music venues.) [5] In order to benefit from all of an artist's income streams, record companies began to rely on the "360 deal", a new business relationship pioneered by Robbie Williams and EMI in 2007. [6] At the other extreme, record companies also used simple manufacturing and distribution deals, which gives a higher percentage to the artist, but does not cover the expense of marketing and promotion. Many newer artists no longer see any kind of "record deal" as an integral part of their business plan at all. Inexpensive recording hardware and software made it possible to create high quality music in a bedroom and distribute it over the internet to a worldwide audience. [7] This, in turn, caused problems for recording studios, record producers and audio engineers: the Los Angeles Times reported that, by 2009, as many as half of the recording facilities in that city had failed. [8] Consumers benefited enormously from the ease with which music can be shared from computer to computer, whether over the internet or by the exchange of physical CDs. This has given consumers unparalleled choice in music consumption and has opened up performers to niche markets to which they previously had little access. [9] According to a Nielsen and Billboard report, in 2012 digital music sales topped the physical sale of music. [10]

Industry Finances

YearRecord sales [11]
(Retail values in billions USD)
US Shipment Value (at Suggested List Price in millions USD) [12] [13] [14] [15] US Physical Shipment Value

(at Suggested List Price in millions USD) [12] [13] [14] [15]

WorldwideUS
Sales ChangeSales ChangeVolumeChangeVolumeChange
199914,584.513,048.0
200036.714.014,323.0Decrease2.svg 1.79%12,705.0Decrease2.svg 2.63%
200133.7Decrease2.svg 8.7%13.4Decrease2.svg 4.3%13,740.9Decrease2.svg 4.06%12,388.8Decrease2.svg 2.49%
200232.2Decrease2.svg 4.5%12.6Decrease2.svg 6.0%12,614.2Decrease2.svg 8.20%11,549.0Decrease2.svg 6.78%
200332.0Decrease2.svg 0.6%11.8Decrease2.svg 6.3%11,854.4Decrease2.svg 6.02%11,053.4Decrease2.svg 4.29%
200433.6Decrease2.svg 5.0%12.2Increase2.svg 3.4%12,345.0Increase2.svg 4.14%11,423.0Increase2.svg 3.34%
200533.5Decrease2.svg 0.3%12.3Increase2.svg 0.8%12,296.9Decrease2.svg 0.39%10,477.5Decrease2.svg 8.28%
200631.8Decrease2.svg 5.1%11.5Decrease2.svg 6.5%11,758.2Decrease2.svg 4.38%9,269.7Decrease2.svg 11.53%
200729.9Decrease2.svg 6.0%10.4Decrease2.svg 9.6%10,372.1Decrease2.svg 11.79%7,495.3Decrease2.svg 19.14%
20088,768.4Decrease2.svg 15.46%5,474.3Decrease2.svg 26.96%
20096.37,683.9Decrease2.svg 12.37%4,376.1Decrease2.svg 20.06%
20106,995.0Decrease2.svg 8.97%3,438.7Decrease2.svg 23.48%
20117,007.7Increase2.svg 0.18%3,170.9Decrease2.svg 5.31%
Total for period
(adj. for inflation)
Decrease2.svg 19.0%
( Decrease2.svg 32.1% )
Decrease2.svg 25.7%
( Decrease2.svg 37.7% )
Decrease2.svg 52.0%
( Decrease2.svg ? ) (using CPI)
Decrease2.svg 75.70%
Record sales
Table is a meta-analysis of eight IFPI annual reports
In 2008, 123m physical albums were sold in the UK, compared with 131m in 2007 and 151m in 2006. At an average price of £7.72, CDs were more than 25% cheaper in 2008 than in 2000.
Manufacture Shipments
The figures below (in millions) indicate the overall size of the U.S. sound recording industry based on manufacturers' shipments at suggested list prices.
Record stores
The transition from CDs to digital downloads has been shrinking the record industry most of the decade, leading to mass layoffs, and artist-roster cuts at major labels. In the USA the number of sold CDs dropped from 942.5 thousands in 2000 to 240.8 thousands in 2011. [12] [15] Approximately 2,680 record stores closed in the U.S. between 2005 and early 2009. [16] In the UK, all the national specialist music retailers have collapsed except for HMV, a variety retailer that was once the UK's largest music retailer.
[17] 1999200020012002200320042005200620072008
Consumers purchasing at record stores44.542.442.536.833.232.539.435.431.130.0%

Peer-to-peer (P2P) downloading

Dawn of P2P: Napster

Napster was an online music file sharing service created by Shawn Fanning while he was attending Northeastern University in Boston and operating between June 1999 and July 2001. Its technology allowed people to easily copy and distribute MP3 files among each other, bypassing the established market for such songs and thus leading to the music industry's accusations of massive copyright violations.

The first peer-to-peer case was A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc. , 239 F.3d 1004 (9th Cir. 2001). The court found that Napster was contributory liable for the copyright infringement of its end-users because it "knowingly encourages and assists the infringement of plaintiffs' copyrights." Although the original service was shut down by court order, it paved the way for larger decentralized peer-to-peer file-distribution programs such as Kazaa, Morpheus, Grokster, iMesh, and Limewire, which have been much harder to control because they practice more technically and legally creative approaches. [9]

File sharing and its effects

A number of studies have found that file sharing has a negative impact on record sales. Examples of such studies include three papers published in the April 2006 issue of the Journal of Law and Economics (Liebowitz, Rob and Waldfogel, Zentner). [18] [19] [20] Alejandro Zentner notes in another paper published in 2005, that music sales had globally dropped from approximately $38 billion in 1999 to $32 billion in 2003, and that this downward trend coincides with the advent of Napster in June 1999. [21] Using aggregate data Stan J. Liebowitz argues in a series of papers (2005, 2012) that file sharing had a significant negative impact on record sales.

In March 2007, The Wall Street Journal found that CD sales had dropped 20 percent in one year, which it interpreted as the latest sign of the shift in the way people acquire their music. BigChampagne LLC has reported that around one billion songs a month were being traded on illegal file-sharing networks. As a result of this decline in CD sales, a significant amount of record stores were going out of business and "...making it harder for consumers to find and purchase older titles in stores". [22] On 19 December 2008, The Wall Street Journal reported the following: [23]

After years of suing thousands of people for allegedly stealing music via the Internet, the recording industry dropped its legal assault as it searches for more effective ways to combat online music piracy. The decision represented an abrupt shift of strategy for the industry, which had opened legal proceedings against about 35,000 people since 2003. Critics say the legal offensive ultimately did little to stem the tide of illegally downloaded music. And it created a public-relations disaster for the industry, whose lawsuits targeted, among others, several single mothers, a dead person and a 13-year-old girl. Instead, the Recording Industry Association of America said it plans to try an approach that relies on the cooperation of Internet-service providers.

Digital business models

With the explosion of formats and the creation of legitimate digital content, the IFPI observed that three main business models had risen to dominance. They are a-la-carte, subscription service, and advertisement-based. [24]

A-la-carte (Download Store)

A-la-carte is a service that sells individual songs, typically for $0.99 and now $1.29. They are known to consumers as "Download Stores". The leading provider is iTunes Store (Apple Inc.), who surpassed Wal-Mart to become the US's largest music retailer in April 2008. Sector leaders include:

Many hundreds more stores operate worldwide, often prominent only in particular countries or specialist genres. A third kind of operator never retails directly to the public, instead offering branded whitelabel stores and portals for organisations including bricks-and-mortar music stores, mobile telephony operators and ISPs. [25]

Some services which initially only offered streaming of tracks now also offer a-la-carte downloads, either through third parties (e.g. Spotify) or fully integrated (Deezer, Juno Digital, Rhapsody etc.).

In 2009 Rolling Stone reported a price war between iTunes and Amazon MP3. Bill Carr, vice president of digital media for Amazon.com mentioned the following of digital music "one of the great benefits of the digital business versus the CD business is that we can experiment with price changes for an hour, a day or however long we like, with no impact on inventory". [26]

Subscription service

A subscription service offers the consumer unlimited downloads for a monthly fee. This approach, according to the Open Music Model, is theorized to maximize revenues in the long run. The sector leader was Napster, [24] which costed $12.95/month and offered 6 million downloads and a $5 a month program. Napster's net revenue for the quarter ending on 30 June 2008 was $30.3 million. [27] Sector leaders included:

Advertisement-based services offer music free of charge to the consumer, while funding is derived from advertisement. The model is widespread as seen by the success of AOL Music, Yahoo! Music and YouTube (multimedia provider). Many of these services are internet radio stations, as they offer continuous streaming music, while others are not continuously streaming. Many of these services offer multimedia or additional services. For example, MySpace (owned by Fox Interactive Media) offers social-networking as its flagship service. comScore reports the top 10 in internet radio viewership in the United States:

Unique Visitors (000)
July '07July '08 % Change
Total Internet: Total Audience180,078189,134Increase2.svg5
AOL Music 15,28423,884Increase2.svg56
Yahoo! Music 23,07518,725Decrease2.svg-19
Clear Channel Online 10,6979,394Decrease2.svg-12
Pandora Radio 2,5514,834Increase2.svg89
Interactive One 5123,515Increase2.svg587
CBS Radio 3,4693,240Decrease2.svg-7
NPR.ORG 1,7172,538Increase2.svg48
Citadel Broadcasting Corporation 1,3731,885Increase2.svg37
Batanga.com 1,2391,810Increase2.svg46
Disney Music 1,7211,598Decrease2.svg -7

Other sector players:

See also List of Internet radio stations

YouTube (owned by Google Inc.) is the premier site for finding music videos for both independent bands and mainstream bands that have released their music on CD or digitally, while also being useful for finding rare songs. YouTube is a multimedia provider, so it is difficult to say how much entertainment it has provided to music consumers, however it did provide about one-third of all 11 billion online video views in the US in the month of April 2008.

The site was also testing three new landing pages dedicated to the popular categories of news, movies, and music. Each page will be populated with the most popular content on the site related to that category. Some had even hailed YouTube as being the "digital successor to MTV" as they seem to be positioning themselves in that manner. They had mixed relations with labels as evidenced by their icy relationship with Warner Music Group but more optimistic relationship with Universal Music.

MySpace (owned by Fox Interactive Media) was also a key player and Rolling Stone reports that it hosts more than 70 million users monthly and that "visitors to the site can hear both Bob Dylan's or The White Stripes' entire catalogue". Unlike many services, MySpace has been successful in making copyright deals with the RIAA's "Big Four", which is Sony BMG, Warner Music Group, Universal Music and EMI, [28] in September 2008. In January 2009, MySpace made partnerships with the following independent labels: Nettwerk, INgrooves, Iris Distribution, RoyaltyShare, and Wind-up Entertainment. In March 2009, CNET News reported that there were more than 5 million bands with music on the streaming-and-discovery music service, and more than 100 million playlists had been created.

Pandora Internet Radio is distinctive from both YouTube and MySpace in that it offers consumers continuously streaming media rather than non-continuous music, which makes it highly similar to terrestrial radio or television. However, it can be contrasted with radio in that it offers music recommendation. YouTube is similar to Pandora in that it also offers recommendation, but is distinct in that content is user-generated.

A new type of service that had also become popular was sites that allow consumers to pay what they wish or pay by advertising on social networking sites. Sites like NoiseTrade.com and comeandlive.com are examples of sites that sponsor artists and allow users to download music in exchange for advertising for the artist. Music was essentially free to users essentially costing only the time it takes to post information about the artist downloaded on Facebook, Twitter, or email. Another example was the release of the Radiohead album In Rainbows in which users could download the album and name their own price. The idea of pay what you want music consumption was new, but catching on with users and growing.

Format issues

Decline of analog, rise of digital

This trend has broader implications in the use of formats. It has been a trend in music, television, movies, and print. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) reported data on the music industry's sales by format over the ten-year period from 1998 until 2007. The data in the table below is from the 2007 report.

Format Market share

[17] 199819992000200120022003200420052006200710-Year Change4-Year Change
Full-length CDs74.883.289.389.290.587.890.387.085.682.6Increase2.svg7.8Decrease2.svg -7.7
Full-length cassettes14.88.04.93.42.42.21.71.10.80.3Decrease2.svg -14.5Decrease2.svg -1.4
Singles (all types)6.85.42.52.41.92.42.42.73.42.4Decrease2.svg -4.40
Music videos/Video DVDs1.00.90.81.10.70.61.00.71.10.4Decrease2.svg -0.6Decrease2.svg -0.6
DVD audioNANANA1.11.32.71.70.81.31.2Increase2.svg1.2Decrease2.svg -0.5
Digital DownloadNANANA0.20.51.30.95.76.711.2Increase2.svg11.2Increase2.svg10.3
SACDNANANANANA0.50.81.20.00.6Increase2.svg0.6Decrease2.svg -0.2
Vinyl LPs0.70.50.50.60.70.50.90.70.60.70Decrease2.svg -0.2

Note: These figures represent data collected only from RIAA member labels, which constitutes only a portion of total online music exchanged.

Statistical analysis suggests the large-scale change in distribution:

In 2008, physical album sales fell 20 percent to 362.6 million from 450.5 million, while digital album sales rose 32 percent to a record 65.8 million units.

[17] 1998199920002001200220032004200520062007
Record Store44.542.442.536.833.232.539.435.431.130.0%
Other Store38.340.842.450.752.853.832.032.729.728.4%
Record Club7.97.66.14.04.14.48.510.512.67.2%
TV, Newspaper, Magazine Ad Or 800 Number2.52.43.02.01.51.72.42.41.71.8%
Internet2.43.22.93.45.05.98.29.110.914.6%
Digital DownloadNANANANANANA6.06.812.013.5%
ConcertNANANANANA1.62.72.01.53.0%

Proliferation of formats

The advent of digital media has led to the sudden creation of many new music formats available to the average consumer. In 2003 there were less than 10 formats available, but by 2007 there were over 100. Today a single artist release can be packaged in multiple formats including video downloads, ringtones or mobile full tracks. As the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) notes:

In 2003, music distribution formats were numbered in single figures – today, they number in the hundreds…In the digital era, record companies are licensing music across a multitude of platforms, in scores of different formats and with hundreds of different partners. [24]

Mobile music

MP3 players

Rise of MP3 players, which are consumer electronics devices that stores, organizes and plays audio files. Some DAPs (digital audio players) are also referred to as portable media players as they have image-viewing and/or video-playing support. The first mass-produced DAP was created in 1997 by SaeHan Information Systems, which domestically sold its "MPMan" player in the middle of 1998. [29] In October 2001, Apple Computer (now known as Apple Inc.) unveiled the first generation iPod, the 5 GB hard drive based DAP with a 1.8" Toshiba drive. With the development of a minimalistic user interface and a smaller form factor, the iPod was initially notable within users of the Macintosh community. In July 2002, Apple introduced the second generation update to the iPod. It was compatible with Windows computers through Musicmatch Jukebox (now known as Y!Music Musicmatch Jukebox). The iPod series, which grew to include microdrive and flash-based players, has become the market leader in DAPs.

Smartphones

The 21st century saw the birth of 3G enabled mobile phones, which enables network operators to offer users a wider range of more advanced services while achieving greater network capacity through improved spectral efficiency.

The key advantage of 3G enabled phones over MP3 players was their greater web integration. This enables users to readily access a far larger quantity of songs than MP3 player users can. For an MP3 player, songs must be stored before the user leaves their computer, but with 3G enabled phones the device is not separated from the source. In 2009, it was projected that revenue from mobile media and entertainment (MME) services in the US would more than double by 2014.

Consumer Genre Preferences in the U.S.

Genre1999200020012002200320042005200620072008
Rock25.224.824.424.725.223.931.534.032.431.8 %
Rap/Hip-hop10.812.911.413.813.312.113.311.410.810.7%
R&B/Urban10.59.710.611.210.611.310.211.011.810.2%
Country10.810.710.510.710.413.012.513.011.511.9%
Pop10.311.012.19.08.910.08.17.110.79.1%
Religious5.14.86.76.75.86.05.35.53.96.5%
Classical3.52.73.23.13.02.02.41.92.31.9%
Jazz3.02.93.43.22.92.71.82.02.61.1%
Soundtracks0.80.71.41.11.41.10.90.80.80.8%
Oldies0.70.90.80.91.31.41.11.10.40.7%
New Age0.50.51.00.50.51.00.40.30.30.6%
Children's0.40.60.50.40.62.82.32.92.93.0%
Other9.18.37.98.17.68.98.57.37.19.1%

[17]

Other noteworthy developments

In the courtroom

In politics

In video games

See also

Related Research Articles

Kazaa Media Desktop. was a peer-to-peer file sharing application using the FastTrack protocol licensed by Joltid Ltd. and operated as Kazaa by Sharman Networks. Kazaa was subsequently under license as a legal music subscription service by Atrinsic, Inc., which lasted until August 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Napster</span> On-line peer-to-peer file sharing software

Napster was a peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing application primarily associated with digital audio file distribution. Founded by Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker, the platform originally launched on June 1, 1999. Audio shared on the service was typically encoded in the MP3 format. As the software became popular, the company encountered legal difficulties over copyright infringement. Napster ceased operations in 2001 after losing multiple lawsuits and filed for bankruptcy in June 2002.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Streaming media</span> Multimedia delivery method

Streaming media is multimedia for playback using an offline or online media player. Technically, the stream is delivered and consumed in a continuous manner by a client, with little or no intermediate storage in network elements. Streaming refers to the delivery method of content rather than the content itself.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Digital music store</span> Online retailer of audio files

A digital music store is a business that sells digital audio files of music recordings over the Internet. Customers gain ownership of a license to use the files, in contrast to a music streaming service, where they listen to recordings without gaining ownership. Customers pay either for each recording or on a subscription basis. Online music stores generally also offer partial streaming previews of songs, with some songs even available for full length listening. They typically show a picture of the album art or of the performer or band for each song. Some online music stores also sell recorded speech files, such as podcasts, and video files of movies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MP3.com</span> Music news website

MP3.com is a web site operated by Paramount Global publishing tabloid-style news items about digital music and artists, songs, services, and technologies. It is better known for its original incarnation as a legal, free music-sharing service, named after the popular music file format MP3, popular with independent musicians for promoting their work. That service was shut down on December 2, 2003, by CNET, which, after purchasing the domain name, established the current MP3.com site.

Ripping is extracting all or parts of digital content from a container. Originally, it meant to rip music out of Commodore 64 games. Later, the term was used to mean to extract WAV or MP3 format files from digital audio CDs, but got applied as well to extract the contents of any media, including DVD and Blu-ray discs, and video game sprites.

AllOfMP3, MP3Sparks and MemphisMembers are brands of online music store that were operated by Mediaservices, Inc., a company founded in 2000 in Moscow, Russia. The stores formerly sold music encoded in standard, non-protected audio formats at a significantly lower cost than other online music stores. In 2008, the original AllOfMp3 site was replaced by a blog.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Music download</span> Digital transfer of music via the Internet into a device capable of decoding and playing it

A music download is the digital transfer of music via the Internet into a device capable of decoding and playing it, such as a personal computer, portable media player, MP3 player or smartphone. This term encompasses both legal downloads and downloads of copyrighted material without permission or legal payment. According to a Nielsen report, downloadable music accounted for 55.9 percent of all music sales in the US in 2012. By the beginning of 2011, Apple's iTunes Store alone made US$1.1 billion of revenue in the first quarter of its fiscal year. Music downloads are typically encoded with modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT) audio data compression, particularly the Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) format used by iTunes as well as the MP3 audio coding format.

<i>A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc.</i> US legal case

A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc., 239 F.3d 1004 was a landmark intellectual property case in which the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court ruling that the defendant, peer-to-peer file sharing service Napster, could be held liable for contributory infringement and vicarious infringement of copyright. This was the first major case to address the application of copyright laws to peer-to-peer file sharing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Music industry</span> Companies and individuals that create and sell music

The music industry consists of the individuals and organizations that earn money by writing songs and musical compositions, creating and selling recorded music and sheet music, presenting concerts, as well as the organizations that aid, train, represent and supply music creators. Among the many individuals and organizations that operate in the industry are: the songwriters and composers who write songs and musical compositions; the singers, musicians, conductors, and bandleaders who perform the music; the record labels, music publishers, recording studios, music producers, audio engineers, retail and digital music stores, and performance rights organizations who create and sell recorded music and sheet music; and the booking agents, promoters, music venues, road crew, and audio engineers who help organize and sell concerts.

This is a timeline of events in the history of networked file sharing.

The open music model is an economic and technological framework for the recording industry based on research conducted at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It predicts that the playback of prerecorded music will be regarded as a service rather than as individually sold products, and that the only system for the digital distribution of music that will be viable against piracy is a subscription-based system supporting file sharing and free of digital rights management. The research also indicated that US$9 per month for unlimited use would be the market clearing price at that time, but recommended $5 per month as the long-term optimal price.

Arts and media industry trade groups, such as the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) and Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), strongly oppose and attempt to prevent copyright infringement through file sharing. The organizations particularly target the distribution of files via the Internet using peer-to-peer software. Efforts by trade groups to curb such infringement have been unsuccessful with chronic, widespread and rampant infringement continuing largely unabated.

File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digital media, such as computer programs, multimedia, program files, documents or electronic books/magazines. It involves various legal aspects as it is often used to exchange data that is copyrighted or licensed.

PassAlong Networks, also known as Tennessee Pacific Group, LLC, was a developer of digital media innovations and services located in Franklin, Tennessee. The company had a digital music library of three million licensed songs, two million of which were raw MP3 music files, and provided a series of products and services in the digital media marketplace.

File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digital media, such as computer programs, multimedia, documents or electronic books. Common methods of storage, transmission and dispersion include removable media, centralized servers on computer networks, Internet-based hyperlinked documents, and the use of distributed peer-to-peer networking.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Recording Industry Association of America</span> Trade organization representing the recording industry in the U.S.

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is a trade organization that represents the music recording industry in the United States. Its members consist of record labels and distributors that the RIAA says "create, manufacture, and/or distribute approximately 85% of all legally sold recorded music in the United States". RIAA is headquartered in Washington, D.C.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Music piracy</span> Copying and distribution of music without the consent of creators or copyright holders

Music piracy is the copying and distributing of recordings of a piece of music for which the rights owners did not give consent. In the contemporary legal environment, it is a form of copyright infringement, which may be either a civil wrong or a crime depending on jurisdiction. The late 20th and early 21st centuries saw much controversy over the ethics of redistributing media content, how much production and distribution companies in the media were losing, and the very scope of what ought to be considered piracy – and cases involving the piracy of music were among the most frequently discussed in the debate.

Metallica, et al. v. Napster, Inc. was a 2000 U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California case that focused on copyright infringement, racketeering, and unlawful use of digital audio interface devices. Metallica vs. Napster, Inc. was the first case that involved an artist suing a peer-to-peer file sharing ("P2P") software company.

The album era was a period in English-language popular music from the mid-1960s to the mid-2000s in which the album was the dominant form of recorded music expression and consumption. It was primarily driven by three successive music recording formats: the 33⅓ rpm long-playing record (LP), the cassette tape, and the compact disc (CD). Rock musicians from the US and the UK were often at the forefront of the era, which is sometimes called the album-rock era in reference to their sphere of influence and activity. The term "album era" is also used to refer to the marketing and aesthetic period surrounding a recording artist's album release.

References

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