Universal Music, Deezer Join Forces on Established Streaming Model -- Update
06 September 2023 - 8:08PM
Dow Jones News
By Mauro Orru and Cecilia Butini
Universal Music Group is partnering with France-based streaming
company Deezer to roll out a new streaming model aimed at better
rewarding established artists, a move the companies say is
necessary to tackle a flood of uploads on the Deezer platform with
no meaningful engagement from listeners.
The record label behind the Weeknd, Billie Eilish and Taylor
Swift said Wednesday that the new model would launch in France in
the fourth quarter ahead of its rollout in additional markets.
Deezer will boost the value of streamed content by artists who have
at least 1,000 streams per month by a minimum of 500 unique
listeners, while demonetizing what it called non-artist noise
content that makes up roughly 2% of streams on its platform.
"We are now embracing a necessary change, to better reflect the
value of each piece of content and eliminate all wrong incentives,
to protect and support artists," said Deezer Chief Executive
Jeronimo Folgueira. Deezer's catalog grew from 90 million to more
than 200 million pieces of content in the last two years.
Universal said that while streaming has been the most
significant technological advancement the music industry had seen
in recent years, many platforms have been inundated with a flurry
of uploads with no meaningful engagement that can be detrimental to
established artists.
Deezer's data showed that content clutter is impeding the
discovery of artists by fans, noting that 97% of all uploaders on
the Deezer platform generated only 2% of total streams, while just
2% of uploaders had more than 1,000 monthly unique listeners.
The partnership will clearly tip the balance in favor of larger,
established artists, Citi analysts wrote in a note to clients. "In
our view, this should be very helpful in terms of UMG's share of
royalty payments from Deezer, however Deezer is a small player in
the global context, so this is unlikely to materially move the
needle," they said.
In 2014, Taylor Swift's entire music catalog was temporarily
yanked from the Spotify Technology streaming service after the pop
star's record label asked Spotify to make her music available to
its paying subscribers only, and not to the users of Spotify's
free, ad-supported tier. Spotify declined the request.
Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com and Cecilia Butini at
cecilia.butini@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 06, 2023 05:53 ET (09:53 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Universal Music Group NV (EU:UMG)
Historical Stock Chart
From Nov 2024 to Dec 2024
Universal Music Group NV (EU:UMG)
Historical Stock Chart
From Dec 2023 to Dec 2024