It can be seen as a
portent of things to come -- and business-as-usual for one of the world's
biggest stars.
"Different year,
different partner." That is an accurate description of the industry maneuvering
behind Apple Music's new relationship with Taylor Swift and the pair's
just-announced exclusive on a 1989 tour documentary.
Those looking for
greater meaning in the Swift/Apple partnership can look at it as a changing of
the guard; many of the most popular artists have shunned streaming services
over the years. Occasionally a band like Metallica or Led Zeppelin would bring
their catalogs exclusively to Spotify to great fanfare. And occasionally an
artist successful enough to rile their distributors, from Thom Yorke to Adele,
would keep their music off streaming services for one reason or another. Now
Swift, an outspoken critic of Spotify who has routinely kept her newest music
off streaming services, is going with Apple Music to release new content.
Taylor Swift '1989
World Tour Live' Concert Film Coming to Apple Music: Watch Trailer
This isn't your older
brother's music business; the market has changed over the last 14 months. Swift
took a stand against free on-demand music -- audio, not video -- by pulling out
of Spotify after the release of 1989 in November of 2014. She followed that
with another statement, one heard throughout the creative community, against
Apple's plan not to pay royalties during Apple Music's three-month trials.
Apple quickly relented. Apple executive Eddy Cue, who oversees all things
iTunes and Apple Music, even called Swift to give her the news. With that door
opened, Apple walked through and stole Swift from its competitors.
It's all about the
relationships. Apple has partnered with artists such as Drake and Pharrell
Williams and lures artists to its Beats 1 radio station for everything from
worldwide premieres to sit-down interviews (including Swift). Apple is also
making a hard push into television. Apple TV was once a hobby in a prolonged
development phase. Now its taking on Amazon Fire TV and Roku in an attempt to
create the dominant over-the-top video streaming product. (Apple is also
working on an actual Apple television -- not just a little set-top box but an
actual HD television -- that may be released in 2016.) Video success is
predicated on exclusive content -- Netflix has it. Amazon Prime has it. Clearly
Apple will have it, too.
Apple Music Comes to
Android: Eddy Cue Says 'We Wanted It to Be For Everyone'
We're in a new era. Top
talent will go to streaming services for the right price and right opportunity.
And while the Swift/Apple partnership may mark a changing of the guard, it's
really just a continuation of old practices. To wit...
Before Apple Music was Comcast.
The cable television provider was the lead sponsor for Swift's 1989 tour.
Comcast customers had access to on-demand access to a slew of video content
featuring Swift. It also gave its customers the opportunity to have a backstage
tour and a meet-and-greet experience.
Apple Music to Beef Up
Publisher Relations in China
Before Comcast was
iHeartRadio. The radio company negotiated its first licensing deal with Swift's
label, Big Machine, back in 2012. The deal pays Big Machine for both broadcast
plays and online streams. It's safe to assume Big Machine gained some airtime,
too -- it was explicitly part of the Clear Channel's deal with Warner Music
Group the following year. iHeartRadio has also provided Swift huge promotional
support for 1989, hosting listening parties in a handful of major markets and
securing a Secret Session broadcast simultaneously on Yahoo! Live and
iHeartMedia's contemporary hit radio stations.
Before iHeartRadio was
Target, the retail partner for Swift's last three albums. Target exclusively
sold a deluxe version of each, along with three bonus tracks, and gave those
albums heavy promotion by airing television ads touting the album release and
its exclusive version. Target got even more bonus content for the 2010 album
Speak Now; in addition to the three bonus tracks were the "Mine"
music video and a behind-the-scenes special about the making of the video.
Swift's new Apple deal
is a business-as-usual move for an artist and label who are wringing every
ounce of sales and promotional benefit out of anyone willing to meet them
halfway -- or so.
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