An emerging void signals new opportunity for innovation in digital music.
The benefit of writing thoughts down is that you get to revisit them. Six years ago, I penned a piece for Hypebot called The Next MySpace. At that time, people in the music business were desperate to for another MySpace to emerge: the site had been a ray of hope, but as it collapsed, online music was scattered across an immature ecosystem of rapidly growing startups like Soundcloud, Bandcamp, Facebook, Spotify, and many others that were eventually acquired or perished and forgotten. I argued:
The closest we will ever get to a “next MySpace” will be either a music network or a social network that manages to gather, organise and integrate the fragments in spectacular fashion.
Defining the MySpace moment
What I call a MySpace moment is not when everything was going well for MySpace: it’s when decline set in. People started replacing MySpace’s music players, which sucked, with Soundcloud’s beautiful waveform players. People started moving much of their social lives to Facebook (for friends) and Twitter (to connect to strangers). Up until then, the dominant social network had been music-driven — people, especially teenagers, expressed their identities by making long lists of bands they liked.
From the ashes of MySpace, which never managed to recover, rose a new ecosystem of music startups. They’ve managed to make it easy for artists to connect to fans, get paid for online playback, let fans know about new shows, and be able to very specifically target people with ads.
That moment, that void, was a massive opportunity and many companies benefited from it.
That moment is here once again.
The new MySpace moment
There are two main factors contributing to a new emerging void for entrepreneurs to leap in. One has to do with product adoption life cycles, which I’ll explain below. The other has to do with the important position Soundcloud claimed in the online music ecosystem.
Soundcloud came closer to being the ‘next MySpace’ than any startup has. And let’s be blunt: the company is not doing well. After years of legal pressure to tackle the problem of works being uploaded to the service without rights holders’ permission, they were forced to adopt a service model that does not make sense for Soundcloud. The typical $10 a month subscription doesn’t make sense. People are on Soundcloud for the fresh content, the mixtapes, remixes, unreleased stuff: the things that will not be on Spotify for weeks or months (or ever!). Why inject the catalogue with music of long deceased people?
There have been reports that Soundcloud would consider any bids higher than the total amount of money invested into the company to date. That’s not a good sign. The road they’ve been forced into is a dead-end street, and the only end game is a quick acquisition.
I don’t think Soundcloud will die, but it is hard for the company to focus on what they’ve always been good at. Now that they’ve been forced into the Spotify model, those are the types of metrics that are going to matter. Subscriber numbers, conversion, retention. So it may struggle to do as good a job serving the audience they’ve traditionally serviced so well. (small note: I love Soundcloud, and the people there: prove me wrong!)
This leaves a vacuum.
Adding to that vacuum, is the fact that Spotify (and other streaming services) are looking beyond early adopters. To understand the phenomenon, have a look at the below graph:
The top part of the graph details the product life cycle. The bottom part explains the type of audience you address during the steps of that life cycle. As we’ve all noticed from the jubilant press reports on streaming’s expansion, we’re in the growth part of the cycle. This means services like Spotify and Apple Music have to get really good at targeting Early Majority and Late Majority type consumers.
If you’re reading this, you’re in the Innovator or Early Adopter segment. Startups typically start off by targeting those segments. So when Spotify moves on from Early Adopters (their de-emphasizing of user generated playlists is a big hint!), it leaves room for new startups to target and better serve those types of users.
Filling the new void
What happens then? Well, we’re going to get to the next phase of the digital music ecosystem – which is mobile-driven, and flirting with augmented reality, VR, and artificial intelligence. Early adopters are likely to keep paying for their Spotify subscriptions – it’s too big a convenience to give up… So entrepreneurs will have to figure out ways to monetize new behaviours.
Now is a great time to look at very specific problems in music. Don’t try to build the next Spotify or the next Soundcloud. For a while, everyone was trying to build the next MySpace — all those startups are dead now. Instead, take a specific problem, research it, build a solution for someone, test it, try it again for a broader group, and if it works: double down and scale up.
Today Iâm excited to announce that Iâm joining IDAGIO, a streaming service for classical music lovers, as Director of Product. Iâm already in the process of relocating to Berlin, where Iâll be joining the team later this month.
In this post, I want to explain why I so strongly believe in this niche focused music service and IDAGIOâs mission. I also want to shed light on the future of MUSIC x TECH x FUTURE as a newsletter, a type of media, and an agency. (tl;dr: the newsletter lives on!)
Two months ago, a friend whom I had worked with in Moscow, at music streaming service Zvooq, forwarded me a vacancy as a Twitter DM. By then, I had developed a kind of mental auto-ignore, because friends kept sending me junior level vacancies in music companies. I was never looking for a âjobââââI had a job (but thanks for thinking of me â¤ď¸). However, I trusted that this friend knew me better as a professional, so I opened the link.
I was immediately intrigued. I hadnât heard of IDAGIO before, but Iâve spent a lot of time thinking about niche services. At one point, the plan for Zvooq was to not build a typical one-size-fits-all app like all the other music streaming services are doing, but instead it would be to split different types of music-related behaviours into smaller apps. The goal would then become to monopolize those behaviours: like Google has monopolized search behaviour (now called Googling), and Shazam has monopolized Shazaming. Long term, it would allow us to expand that ecosystem of apps beyond streaming content, so we would be able to monetize behaviours with higher margins than behaviours related to music listening.
We ended up building just one, Fonoteka, before we had to switch strategies due to a mix of market reality, licensing terms, and burn rate. That was fine: it was what the business needed, and what Russia as a market needed.
Since then, there have been a number of niche music ideas, like services for indie rock, high quality streaming, etc. And while those are all commendable, I was never quite interested in them, because it just seemed like those services would not have a strong enough strategic competitive advantage in the face of tech giants with bulging coffers. Their offers were often also just marginally better, but getting people to install an app and build a habit around your service, unlearn their old solution, learn to do it your way⌠thatâs a huge thing to ask of people, especially once you need to go beyond the super early adopters.
But niche works on a local level. You can see it with Yandex.Music and Zvooq in Russia, with Anghami in the Middle East, and Gaana in India.
Over the last decade, Iâve lived in Russia, Bulgaria, Turkey, and The Netherlands (where Iâm from). Each country has unique ways of interacting with music. Music has a different place in each culture. I think local music services work, because they combine catalogues and local taste with a deep understanding of how their target audience connects to music. It allows them to build something catering exactly to those behaviours. Itâs music and behaviour combined.
When I started talking to the IDAGIO team, I soon understood that they too combine these elements. Classical music, in all its shapes and forms, has many peculiarities, which will remain an object of study for me for the next years. The fact that the same work often has a multitude of recordings by different performers already sets it apart. One can map a lot of behaviours around navigation, exploring, and comparison to just this one fact.
Despite being younger and having more modest funding, IDAGIO has already built a product that caters better to classical music fans than the other streaming services do (and also serves lossless streams). Understanding that, I was fast convinced that this was something I seriously needed to consider.
So I got on a plane and met the team. Over the course of three days, we ran a condensed design sprint, isolated a problem we wanted to tackle together, interviewed expert team members, explored options, drew up solutions, and prototyped a demo to test with the target audience. Itâs an intense exercise, especially when youâre also being sized up as a potential team member, but the team did such a good job at making me feel welcome and at home (â¤ď¸). Through our conversations, lunches, and collaboration, I was impressed with the teamâs intelligence, creativity, and general thoughtfulness.
Then I spent some extra time in Berlinâââafter all, Iâd be moving there. Aforementioned friend took me to a medical museum with a room full of glass cabinets containing jars with contents which will give me nightmares for years to come. Besides that, I met a bunch of other friends, music tech professionals, and entrepreneurs, who collectively convinced me of the high caliber of talent and creative inspiration in the city.
Returning home, I made a decision I didnât expect to make this year, nor in the years to come. A decision to make a radical switch in priorities.
Motivation, for me, comes from the capacity to grow and to do things with meaningful impact. MUSIC x TECH x FUTURE has exposed me to a lot of different people, a lot of different problems, and has allowed me to do what I find interesting, what Iâm good at, but also what I grow and learn from. With IDAGIO I can do all of the latter, but with depth, and with a team.
Classical music online has been sidelined a bit. It makes a lot of sense when you place it in a historical perspective: a lot has changed in recent years. The webâs demographic skews older now. You can notice this by counting the number of family members on Facebook. The internet used to be something most adults would just use for work, so if you were building entertainment services, you target the young, early adopter demographic. Thatâs pop music, rock, electronic, hiphop, etc. Classical was there, sure, but Spotify wasnât designed around it, iTunes wasnât, YouTube wasnât.
Now weâre actually reaching a new phase for music online. The streaming foundation has been built. Streaming is going mainstream. The platforms from the 2007â2009 wave are maturing and looking beyond their original early adopter audiences⌠So weâre going to see a lot of early adopters that are not properly served anymore. Theyâre going to migrate, look for new homes. A very important segment there, one that has always been underserved, are classical music fans. And now, this niche audience is sizeable enough to actually build a service around.
Why? Well, the internet has changed since the large last wave of music startups. Mobile is becoming the default way people connect to the web. For adults, this has made the web less of a thing for âworkâ, and has made entertainment more accessible. Connected environments make it easy to send your mobile audio to your home hifi set, or car speakers. The amount of people on the internet has more than doubled.
This makes the niche play so much more viable than just a few years ago. It has to be done with love, care, and a very good understanding of whose problem youâre trying to solve (and what that problem is). IDAGIO has exactly the right brilliant minds in place to pull this off and Iâm flattered that in 2 weeks time, Iâll get to spend 2,000 hours a year with them.
What happens to the agency?
Iâll be winding down the agency side of MxTxF. This means Iâm not taking on any more clients, but Iâm happy to refer you to great people I know. Some longer term projects, that just take a couple of hours per week, Iâll keep on to bring to completion.
What happens to the newsletter?
The newsletter goes on! I get a lot of personal fulfilment out of it. The agency was born out of the newsletter, so who knows what more it will spawn. Iâm actually figuring out a way to add audio and video content to the mix. I expect Midem and SĂłnar+D next June will be pilots for that. Berlin is a great place for music tech, so if anything, I hope the newsletter will only get more interesting as time goes on.
Besides the personal fulfilment, it allows me to be in touch with this wonderful community, to meet fascinating people, and occasionally to help organise a panel and bring some of my favourite minds into the same room at the same time.
If youâd like to support the newsletter, you can help me out on Patreon. You can become a patron of the newsletterâââwith your support, I can add extra resources to the newsletter, which will let me push the content to the next level (high on the list: a decent camera).
Iâd love to hear about your favourite works and recordings. Feel free to email me on bg@idagio.com, with a link, and tell me what I should listen for.
Why the next big innovation in music will change music itselfâââand how our moods are in the driverâs seat for that development.
Over the last half year, Iâve had the pleasure to publish two guest contributions in MUSIC x TECH x FUTURE about our changing relationship with music.
Then last week, James Lynden shared his research into how Spotify affects mood and found out that people are mood-aware when they make choices on the service (emphasis mine):
Overall, mood is a vital aspect of participantsâ behaviour on Spotify, and it seems that participants listen to music through the platform to manage or at least react to their moods. Yet the role of mood is normally implicit and unconscious in the participantsâ listening.
Having developed music streaming products myself, like Fonoteka, when I was at Zvooq, Iâm obviously very interested in this topic and what it means for the way we structure music experiences.
Another topic I love to think about is artificial intelligence, generative music, as well as adaptive and interactive music experiences. Particularly, Iâm interested at how non-static music experiences can be brought to a mass market. So when I saw the following finding (emphasis mine), things instantly clicked:
In the same way as we outsource some of our cognitive load to the computer (e.g. notes and reminders, calculators etc.) perhaps some of our emotional state could also be seen as being outsourced to the machine.
For the music industry, I think explicitly mood-based listening is an interesting, emerging consumption dynamic.
Mood augmentation is the best way for non-static music to reach a mass market
James is spot-on when he says mood-based listening is an emerging consumption dynamic. Taking a wider view: the way services construct music experiences also changes the way music is made.
The playlist economy is leading to longer albums, but also optimization of tracks to have lower skip rates in the first 30 seconds. This is nothing compared to the change music went through in the 20th century:
The proliferation of the record as the default way to listen to music meant that music became a consumer product. Something you could collect, like comic books, and something that could be manufactured at a steady flow. This reality gave music new characteristics:
Music became static by default: a song sounding exactly the same as all the times youâve heard it before is a relatively new quality.
Music became a receiving experience: music lost its default participative quality. If you wanted to hear your favourite song, you better be able to play it, or a friend or family member better have a nice voice.
Music became increasingly individual: while communal experiences, like concerts, raves and festivals flourished, music also went through individualization. People listen to music from their own devices, often through their headphones.
Personalized music is the next step
I like my favourite artist for different reasons than my friend does. I connect to it differently. I listen to it at different moments. Our experience is already different, so why should the music not be more personalized?
The gaming industry has figured out a different model: give people experience to the base game for free, and then charge them to unlock certain features. Examples of music apps that do this are Bjorkâs Biophilia as well as mixing app Pacemaker.
But itâs early days. And the real challenge in creating these experiences is that listeners donât know theyâre interested in them. As quoted earlier from James Lynden:
The role of mood is normally implicit and unconscious in the participantsâ listening.
The most successful apps for generative music and soundscapes so far, have been apps that generate sound to help you meditate or focus.
But as we seek to augment our human experience through nootropics and the implementation of technology to improve our senses, itâs clear that music as a static format no longer has to be default.
Implementing the obvious missing feature could point to a new product direction for Spotify.
About a month ago, Spotify introduced Daily Mix, a new set of playlists that lets you ârediscoverâ your favourite music. It mixes past favourites with tracks you might like and its stated aim is to take the work out of organizing daily listening.
For years, Spotify has focused on creating better âlean back experiencesâ that allow for more passive listening. A music tech productâs typical early adopters are people that are heavily invested in the process, but as they achieve greater market penetration, they need to target new audiences.
At first, Spotify focused on human curation and it remains a strong focus. More recently, after the Echo Nest acquisition, Spotify has chosen to give algorithms more play, such as through Discover Weekly and Release Radar, and now Daily Mix.
The obvious missing feature from Daily Mix, and much requested, is the ability to download tracks to your device through an offline sync feature.
Their official explanation for it, frequent updates and large amounts of tracks, doesnât really seem to add up. Many users offline sync large playlists that are regularly updated. If itâs an issue, then users just pick one or two favs of their Daily Mix playlists and sync them.
As I thought about it, it reminded me of what I envisioned Soundcloudâs future as a subscription service would be. Soundcloudâs current proposition of serving dead artistsâ music alongside the brand, brand new for $10 / month, doesnât make any sense and likely got forced upon them by labels taking a tough stand and impatient investors.
What I always thought Soundcloud would do, was simply to release an app that would allow users to offline sync their favourites and charge users about $2 to $4 a month. As Spotifyâs reportedly in talks to acquire Soundcloud, perhaps Daily Mix can be their first step into launching more price points.
Letâs imagine Daily Mix as a spin-off.
New price point
Spotifyâs in need of a new price point. On average, the monthly spend of Spotifyâs new subscribers is $3.09, not $9.99. This is due to discounting. Spotify, and others, are having a difficult time bringing in the mainstream music consumer at $9.99 per month.
Spinning off Daily Mix as a separate product for the mainstream consumer could provide those users with a limited, but focused experience and monetize them without discounting.
The price point is a great way to onboard users. A user may use Spotifyâs main app in ad-supported mode, but pay for Daily Mix. Theyâll get used to having a monthly payment in music. Meanwhile, if they want to hear more by a certain artist in their Daily Mix, they can tap the artist name and be directed to the main Spotify app.
Inside Spotifyâs main app, they can work to upsell users to higher price points for additional functionality.
Moving beyond all-you-can-eat (AYCE)
The original proposition of music services was that if you pay $9.99 a month, youâll get all the music out there⌠However, with streaming holdouts and exclusives, this doesnât seem viable. Due to the original frame, consumers are sometimes unwilling to spend more on digital music.
Music services need to shift away from having users associate their payments exclusively with the content, and instead monetize functionality around music.
Cannibalisation?
There remains the question of cannibalisation. Part of Spotifyâs users who currently pay $9.99 / month may actually find that a Daily Mix app serves them well enough and subsequently downgrade. This makes an app like Daily Mix tough to license.
There are precedents though. Apps like MTV Trax let users download & listen to the most popular hits on a daily basis and in some markets, like Spain, they charge around $1 / week.
Alternatively, Spotify could wrap Daily Mix into some kind of trial, minimize functionality and hide the playlists to give it more of a radio feel, or work on the premium offer to be able to retain more premium subscribers, as well as upsell more effectively.
Another idea: expand Daily Mix with something not included in the main Spotify app, so that music aficionados can be convinced to spend some money on top of their $9.99.
Extra features for power users in $9.99
In a multi-app strategy, there are 3 things Spotify must do:
Make sure user conversion funnels for each app are functioning;
Make sure the lower tier apps donât cannibalize the higher tier too much;
Optimize upsell funnels across its products.
Spotify likely needs it current feature set with Discover Weekly, Release Radar, Daily Mix and other features in order to onboard and retain users. Also, they donât want to piss off subscribers, so they need to come up with product propositions that differ enough from the scope of the current product.
Some examples of features that could be sold at extra cost:
Buy Pacemaker and let Spotify create actual mixes for you;
Playlist creation games, eg. with friends or well-known artists;
Theyâll have to figure out the specifics out soon and work out a plan on how to counter cannibalisation. As more mid-tier price point music subscription apps are entering the market, Spotify will need to compete.
Who would you rather lose a customer to? Someone elseâs app, or your own?
So, the music industry has changed. If you havenât been living in a cave for the past 15 years you probably noticed. For those who need to catch up, here are the 3 main points that summarize it:
increased access to the means of production;
increased access to information;
democratization of distribution channels.
But some things remain unchanged by this digital revolution. Royalties distribution, for example. The correct distribution of copyright royalties is still a headache for composers, musicians and labels. Despite music having been practically dematerialised and living on networks where everything is trackable. Companies like Kobalt are trying to change this game, but we still have a long way to go until we get this right. This is an issue that deserves its own article, so Iâll leave it for now.
Among the lasting habits that have been practically untouched along these 15 years, my personal highlight goes to a mantra I hear in every conference, article and talk about music. It goes something like this: peopleâs emotional/behavioural relationship with music hasnât changed. We still love music the way we always did.
Part II
AÂ couple of weeks ago I was reading a report published by Vevo where in its introduction Erick Huggers, Vevoâs CEO, once again repeats the mantra:
Well, I donât know where Huggers and others are looking, but I canât believe that they still donât see something that itâs in everyoneâs face. This relationship has changed! C-H-A-N-G-E-D. I would write it upside down if I could.
Before we move on with the subject, I just want to make one thing clear: yes, music still moves crowds of people. Yes, it is more listened than ever. And yes, artists still have a lot of influence. However that doesnât mean people still relate to music the same way they used to.
Probably there is no other cultural activity that is so universal, that permeates, affects and shapes human behaviour as much as music, said Alan P. Merriam in The Anthropology of Music. However, musicâs own definition evokes a variety of philosophical, cultural and even political questions. Musicologists suggest that its definition is directly related to the social context and function of certain behaviours in a particular culture. In my opinion, these two wordsâââcontext and functionâââdefine a fundamental element, so many times forgotten, of the discussion: the formation of our musical preferences.
The changes in the way we build our tastes and preferences are the things that should be analyzed, so that we can understand why today music has a new function and also why we can no longer blindly support ourselves on arguments like the one above by Huggers, especially if it is presented in an music industry context. To understand context, function and how today these issues have altered peopleâs relationship with music, we must go back in time.
Part III
Music always had context and function. In the early days, when we were still just tribes, music used to have spiritual functions. Variety didnât exist, neither was music entertainment. Oneâs tribe music was all that there was to listen to and it was directly related to celebration of the tribeâs beliefs. In other words, music was attached to religion. In this context, forget about music preference. People will listen to what the Chief says.
We evolved into more complex societies where we began to be divided into social classes. There were the nobles, the bourgeois, and the clergy. Then came everyone else. At this time the culture each one of these groups had access to, was a fundamental tool for social distinction. For the rich there were good instruments, good musicians, and concert halls. There was classical music. For the rest there were rudimentary instruments, self-taught musicians and taverns. There was folk music. In that context, musical preference was a status symbol and it showed to which social class one belonged.
During the 20th century the development of consumer societies gave new meaning to all goods produced. Especially after World War II, we started living in a society where for the first time supply was greater than demand. At this point there were a great number of companies offering very similar products and services. The technical differentiation between these goods gave space to brand personality construction and so we began consuming products not only for their quality but also because we identify with them. We started to use consumption as a way to build individual and collective identities.
In this process, cultural goodsâââspecially musicâââwere extremely important. Musical preference was a key element in defining ones personality, particularly among the youth. It was what defined which group a person belonged to, which ideology he or she followed, and in what values he or she believed in, independent of what was his or hers social-economical background. In that context, music preference was about identity.
Part IV
We arrived at the beginning of the 21st century and all these functionsâââspiritual, social and identity buildingâââstill exist. The difference is that now they’ve lost strength and no longer are the pillars that define our musical preference. The 3 key elements of the digital revolution (access to the means of production, access to information and democratization of distribution channels) created a new context to music consumption having a direct impact in the way new generations are building their musical preferences.
Never before in history have we had access to so much music, for such a low cost and at such a high speed. The access difficulty, which in my opinion was a key element in keeping our preferences so narrow, was eliminated from the equation. At 15 (in 1998) I had a proud collection of roughly 100 CDs as a result of the musical choices I made. Today a teenager with the same age has access to humanityâs music library only a few clicks away.
Part V
The platforms in which we consume music have also changed. The introduction of the iPod started transforming music consumption into a private experience which allowed people to try out new music genres without worrying about their social image.
Through the ease of access and popularization of new platforms, music started being ubiquitous. The frontiers to experimentation were then opened and brought new tastes and the permission for listeners to break up the social identity chains of each genre allowing the free flow between a variety of different styles of music. It was the beginning of the process that freed music from its function as an identity building tool. At this point a new function for music emerges: the practical function.
Part VI
Music started to be used according to the activities and tasks that listeners were performing during their daily routines. Like this, music preference that before was an almost immutable passion built through context, today looks like a chameleon changing from moment to moment.
We are living the age of âI love this music, but at the right momentâ, we see the creation of a generation of eclectics that use music in very practical ways, a generation where the mood related to an activity is more important than genre. Need to study? Downtempo or classical. Going to the gym? EDM or hip-hop. Time for cooking? Indie folk or jazz. Going to a party? Techno or trap. In other words, the experience is not in the music itself, but in what we do while while listening to it. In this context it is interesting to realize how we can look at todayâs music services with new eyes. Last.fm is a great example.
Last.fm was one of the first social networks to use music to establish connections between users based on their music preferences. It identifies all tracks and the related artists played by its users and utilizes this data to build a personal music history. The initial goal was that from this list of most played artists the userâs musical preferences would arouse. If a person listens to Beethoven, Mozart and Bach a lot then classical music must be his or her preference.
But following the aforementioned argument, that music today has a practical function in peopleâs life, we can not accept this conclusion so fast. Classical music today is consumed a lot by people while they work and, in this case, we have to also consider that classical may not be their preference, but just the genre that follows her main daily activity: work. If the tasks we perform during the day are what are going to define what we will listen, and not our musical preference for a specific genre, than we can say that today, Last.fm does not present the musical preferences of its users, but a list of the activities they engage the most in.
While in Last.fmâs case we can consider that this data is generated âaccidentallyâ as a service sub product, to Spotify the perception of the new practical function of music was fundamental to the development of its UX.
Spotify was one of the first major services to understand that to this new generation of listeners, the stars of streaming services are not songs and artists, but playlists and moods. Spotifyâs user experience is built around these two elements, because the company understood that its users do not solely use the service for contemplation, but use music as a fuel for another activity. It was the first time I saw a service put together moods and genres side by side, presenting a perfect mirror for this profound change in music consumption behaviour.
By focusing on moods and playlists, Spotify helps its users to quickly find a perfect selection of music to whatever activity he or she is engaging in, without having the headache of searching through 30 million songs to find the perfect ones for the moment.
Part VII
Now that weâve gone through the new practical function of music, how it changed the formation of our musical preferences, how it changed our relationship with music and finally how we can have a new look on services and business strategies, I want to go back to the focal point to this article which is the mantra âwe still love music the same way we always didâ. Iâll once again quote Vevoâs CEO Erick Huggers to present my counterpoints:
âMusic creates transformative experiences. It has the power to connect people in personal and meaningful ways unlike any other medium.â
No, it is not music that creates the experience. Music is the background that helps to set the mood. The activity which people are engaging in is what connects people (with themselves or others). It is the Saturday lunch with friends, the picnic at the park, the music festival with 40.000 people in the middle of the desert.
âFor music fans, itâs an essential part of how they live their day-to-day lives.â
I believe this statement is true only if we understand that music is an essential part of this new generation of listeners, because it gives the key to the activities they will engage in and not becauseâââlike in the pastâââit was used to build their personal and collective identities.
âFinding the songs and melodies that speak to them directly and reflect their unique personas isnât so much a desire, but a need.â
Here is the big issue. Music for new generations is not about reflecting their unique personas, but a mirror of the activity he or she is performing. Music was once a question of loyalty and identity. Today itâs a good consumed according to moments. So the musical preferences of these listeners is much more flexible and no longer the reflection of their identities.
Part VIII
Whether this new perspective is something bad or good for music is not up to me (or especially to this article) to say. What is important here is that this revolution cannot be stopped. It is a continuous process of gradual transformation where the individual is in charge. It is a self regulating revolution where it is not up to industries and businesses to control it, but to really understand its culture, values, rules and players. We should not perceive this new listener from a conservative viewpoint or as an enemy to the music establishment. We should analyze it from an evolutionary standpoint where the listener is the transformation agent in a radical change in the social consumption relations.
Futurism is a science that usually gets its predictions wrong because it is done in large by people who look at technology and numbers (and because it is just damn hard to see whatâs coming). Technology can change peopleâs behaviour, but only if it is the right time for it, in the right context. Numbers can sometimes be misleading. If you only look at the big numbers you might miss the small ones which are the real indicators of transformation. The real challenge in futurism is to predict how our behaviour is going to change. Borrowing from Tom Vanderbiltâs excellent article:
âWhen technology changes people, it is often not in the ways one might expect.â
Technology changed the way we listen to music and as a result we changed the way we feel about it. We should start considering that people are no longer loving music, but that they just like it. Or are even just using it. But what is more important is that only when we understand these changes, will the music industry be able to create services, products and business models that are in tune with this new listener.
A bot for Facebook Messenger lets you access your Spotify Release Radar and Discover Weekly playlists from inside Messenger. Since it currently lacks an interface, here are the steps to follow to get new music recommendations delivered to Messenger.
Tell it you want to sign in, by typing sign in. Then login to Spotify & give the bot the necessary permissions.
3. Play something
You can now choose to play tracks on Spotify or get 30 second previews.
4. Extra commands
Got lost and want to bring back the playlist? Type current week. You’ll also be able to tell it playlist 1 week ago to get last week’s playlist, but first you’ll need to be using the bot for a while.
At the time of writing, there are still some bugs to iron out. If you run into any difficulties, you can contact the bot’s maker, Daniel Noshkin, on Twitter or on Product Hunt.