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Will Apple announce a free music streaming service next week?

Apple Says Mashable, "Apple is supposedly talking with the top four major labels about offering a free streaming music service to consumers."

In other words, now that Apple has acquired music streaming service Lala, it may theoretically provide you the capability of moving your iTunes music collection "to the cloud," where it will be freed of the constraints of your device and presumably available across any gadget that can access it.

This could have several effects:

1.  It will increase the value of the collection and the mechanism whereby that collection is gathered, stored, and distributed.  In other words, the content and its distribution will gain value, the gadget will lose value.

2.  It will turn all kinds of consumer items into iTunes receivers which were not considered so before.

3.  It will diminish the difference between existing streaming services (customizable or otherwise) and your own iTunes collection.

4.  It will warm up the market for the "behavior" of streaming.  What we see today in streaming usage is the tiny tip of the iceberg that will come if and when all those iTunes users are stream-enabled.

5.  It will magnify the importance of "unique and compelling content" being central to the online streaming experience, since that content will now be in direct competition with the music you choose and buy yourself on iTunes.

6.  The consumer acceptance that would follow such a move would accelerate the momentum among automakers to provide streaming capability in new cars.

7.  It will further pressure radio to do one of two things:  Either invest a lot less and become a ubiquitous but diminishing music utility, or invest a lot more and provide the kind of unique and compelling content which can capture and sustain an audience regardless of what's on Pandora, regardless of what's on iTunes.

View Comments
  • Psonar already offers unlimited cloud storage and streaming of your own music for free to any internet-connected device including mobiles (plus you can use it like iTunes to copy your music to and from all of your devices ? not just those in Apple world.)
    Rich discovery and social features follow early in 2010.
    Check it all out at
  • Well, not "any gadget" it will have to be a product built by Apple.
    I'm beyond needing commentary with my music. Stations will have to rely on a personality and better conversations.
  • It will further pressure radio to do one of two things: Either invest a lot less and become a ubiquitous but diminishing music utility, or invest a lot more and provide the kind of unique and compelling content which can capture and sustain an audience regardless of what's on Pandora, regardless of what's on iTunes.
    I thought that was pretty interesting. you can already see radio companies (in Canada at least) doing your first scenario. I work in a market where 2 of the 6 stations are empty auto music stations (Rogers Broadcasting) that don't even have PDs anymore.
    But especially after yesterday's post, I personally plan on being the number 2 option! even if I gotta make the investments myself.
  • George
    If there's nothing between the songs on this streaming service, and there's nothing between the songs on Pandora, and Pandora has 70 million users, then perhaps the Pandora model is what the audience wants.
  • Interesting that I used the term "content" instead of "music."
    You may not be entirely right, George, but we must assume that the key is - at least - what's between the songs.
    If there are any songs to be between.
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MRM President Mark Ramsey has worked with innumerable television and radio broadcasters over his career, including all the biggest names, from Clear Channel, CBS, Bonneville, Sirius XM...

Mark Ramsey