
Swedish
music streamer Spotify will provide the soundtrack for Sony devices,
the companies said Wednesday, spelling the end to the streaming music
service from the Japanese tech giant that invented the Walkman.
The
deal which makes the Swedish startup the exclusive provider for
PlayStation Music and Sony’s smartphones and tablets sees the companies
link up in 41 markets.
“Music
is a core component of the entertainment offering that consumers expect
from Sony,” Andrew House, head of Sony’s Network Entertainment
Business, said in a statement.
“This
partnership represents the best in music and the best in gaming coming
together, which will benefit the vibrant and passionate communities of
both Spotify and PlayStation Network.”
The
deal strengthens Spotify’s position as the world’s biggest music
streaming service as competition from US-based services such as Pandora
and YouTube Music heats up and Apple prepares to launch its own service
later this year.
“Gaming
remains a sort of final frontier of music. It’s still locked in a quite
old fashioned model… sourcing content from different labels,” Mark
Mulligan, a music industry analyst, told AFP.
“And Sony is bringing in the biggest mainstream digital music streaming brand into the games console environment.”
The
deal also eliminates potential competition from Sony, a pioneer in
mobile music with its Walkman players that has had difficulty moving
into the digital music age, which said it would close its Music
Unlimited service in all 19 countries where it is currently available.
“Natural heirs to digital music”
“Sony
always thought that they should be the natural heirs to digital music
because they pioneered portable music with the Walkman. They’ve tried
many things over the last 15 years but nothing has really worked on any
meaningful scale… the music experiences haven’t been the best,” said
Mulligan.
Spotify
has become a major powerbroker in the music industry since its US
launch in 2011 and there have been widespread reports in recent months
that the unlisted company plans to go public.
“We
are incredibly honoured to partner with Sony and PlayStation to give
gamers around the world an amazing experience wherever they listen to
music,” Spotify founder Daniel Ek said in a statement.
The
company has come under fire from artists including US pop giant Taylor
Swift for inadequate payouts, but Spotify says 70 percent of its
turnover goes to record labels and music creators.
The successful but controversial music service recently said it had 60 million users, a quarter of whom were paying subscribers.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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