Powerhouse Indie Label Beggars: “We do not have an agreement with Apple Music”
The indie chorus concerned about the effect of Apple Music's 90 day free trial is getting louder. In an open letter to the industry, Martin Mills, founder of one of Europe's biggest indies Beggars, joined US and UK trade groups A2IM and AIM in calling on Apple to change the policy. The letter also expressed concerns about Apple's new music social network CONNECT.
Here is the full text of the open letter from Martin Mills of Beggars Group Ltd to its artists and labels. We've added bold to emphasize certain passages.
To Beggars Group Labels Artists and Managers:
We thought it was time to update you on the situation with Apple Music, following speculation in the press, some of it ill-informed. Apple have been a wonderful partner for the last decade, and we confidently trust they will continue to be so. We have recently been in discussions with Apple Music about proposed terms for their new service. In many ways the deal structure is very progressive, but unfortunately it was created without reference to us, or as far as we know any independents, and as such unsurprisingly presents problems for us, and for our coming artist releases. We are naturally very concerned, especially for artists releasing new albums in the next three months, that all streaming on the new service will be unremunerated until the end of September. Whilst we understand the logic of their proposal and their aim to introduce a subscription-only service, we struggle to see why rights owners and artists should bear this aspect of Apple’s customer acquisition costs.
And given the natural response of competing digital services to offer comparable terms, we fear that the free trial aspect, far from moving the industry away from freemium services – a model we support – is only resulting in taking the “mium” out of freemium.
We are also naturally concerned, as ever, as to whether we and you are being treated on a level playing field vis a vis the major labels and their artists. Additionally, we have reservations about both commercial and practical aspects of the Artist Connect area. It is a mistake to treat these rights as royalty free, especially in the light of recent licenses with services like Soundcloud.
At the moment we do not have an agreement with Apple Music that would allow us to participate in the new service. However, we very much hope that the obstacles to agreement can be removed, for us and for independent Merlin-member labels as a whole, and that we will be able to fully support this potentially exciting new service in the coming days.
Have you read Cuepoint’s take on how the royalties are always skewed in favor of the major labels? The royalty proposition mentioned there seems both sensible AND equitable… which is probably why it will NEVER BE CONSIDERED. But hey, an artist can dream…
Take a read at https://medium.com/cuepoint/how-to-make-streaming-royalties-fair-er-8b38cd862f66 – I’d love to see YOUR input on the idea.