Facebook has added social music and the industry needs to pay attention [MIDiA]
“Facebook the Behemoth offering to make music videos part of its social broadcast for users is a resounding clarion call to get on board now,” writes MIDiA’s Hanna Kahlert, “or risk being too late.”
by Hanna Kahlert of industry analysts MIDiA
“Social music will need to keep this intrinsically social aspect at heart, and not fall into the Facebook trap of a mere marketing apparatus”
Facebook has just rolled out a new option to share clips of music videos to its Stories, which will be fully available to users by August 16th. The move has two main sets of implications.
On the music side, we (should) have known that social music will be the next stage of innovation for the industry essentially since TikTok started rocketing users to stardom overnight, as meanwhile young people – digital natives who tend to be hyper-social – started to pick up instruments at unprecedented rates. It is a logical progression of events that familiarity with the tools and ease of access will open the doors to the masses getting involved in that which they love – and it truly is a testament to streaming that a love of music is now so commonplace. Music has been returned from the prestigious to the people, hurrah, etc.
There are caveats, of course, but between Roblox DJ sets and TikTok duets on the one side making music creation an easy and enjoyable activity, and falling streaming revenues for artists, on the other hand, rendering it a relative dead end as the be-all-end-all distribution and revenue generator of the industry, social music – and the monetization opportunities, fandom generation, and popular engagement which come alongside that – seems to be a growing opportunity on the cusp of realization. Facebook the Behemoth offering to make music videos part of its social broadcast for users is a resounding clarion call to get on board now, or risk being too late.
On the other hand, is Facebook’s latest offering really such a good thing? It is not a terribly huge announcement, to be fair – but it is just one more instance in a long line of pseudo-vations by the incumbent platforms that have become monotonously predictable. Snapchat made stories. Then Instagram made stories. Then Facebook made stories. Even Twitter tried stories. Clubhouse emerged, offering something new – and then Twitter made its own version, and now Spotify has one as well. YouTube is perhaps the only incumbent app which has not scrambled to reinvent itself after every latest trend, and it is a welcome breath of confident consistency that has probably, to its credit, contributed to its longevity. It, too, has borrowed certain ideas to create Shorts – but on the back of what is already a social music and video platform and with the entire audio catalog of YouTube behind the proposition, it does make a certain amount of sense.
Really, social networks are about communication. Increasingly, they have – for purposes of monetization – become about the communication of brands to consumers, rather than for people amongst each other. The social is losing the true element of social – and thus its core value proposition, leaving open opportunities for new ideas.
Music is about emotional connection, and at heart is a shared moment between audience members and the musicians themselves. Social music will need to keep this intrinsically social aspect at heart, and not fall into the Facebook trap of a mere marketing apparatus if it is to maintain cultural relevance – and abstain from destroying musical appreciation by devaluing it to just another branded, ad-riddled activity. Making the creation of music, no matter how simple or fun, a meaningful moment for those who engage in it will be a critical cultural aspect successful social music propositions will need to hit on the nose – and when they do, they will far outperform their scrambling copycat competitors.