Amazon now fastest-growing music service, outpacing Apple & Spotify
Driven by inexpensive Alexa products, Amazon is adding customers at a faster rate than either Spotify or Apple Music -- but still has a long way to go to catch up.
Apple CEO Tim Cook and Eddy Cue unveiling Apple Music
According to sources familiar with the matter, Amazon has quietly outpaced subscriber additions versus its more well-known competitors. A report by the Financial Times claims that Amazon Music Unlimited subscribers have grown by about 70% in the last year.
While the rate of growth is higher than that of Apple or Spotify's offerings, it still lags behind in total subscribers. In April, Amazon had about 32 million subscribers to all of its music services including both Unlimited and the free Amazon Prime Music tier, that accompanies an Amazon Prime subscription.
On June 27, Apple's Eddy Cue was clear about Apple Music's subscriber base. The executive said that Apple Music had exceeded 60 million paid subscribers, five months after it had hit 50 million nearly four years after launch.
Spotify broke 100 million subscribers in April after seven years of availability.
It isn't clear if the Financial Times subscriber numbers include trial subscriptions to the premium services.
Amazon Music Unlimited costs $7.99 a month for Prime subscribers, and $9.99 a month for non-subscribers. Amazon Prime Music contains a smaller subset of the music available on Amazon Music Unlimited, is free to Amazon Prime subscribers, and is included in reported figures from Amazon and in the Financial Times report.
Apple Music costs $9.99, with a family plan for multiple users available for $14.99 a month -- the same as the family plan for Amazon Music Unlimited. Spotify has a free tier, and Spotify Premium sells for $9.99 a month.
Apple CEO Tim Cook and Eddy Cue unveiling Apple Music
According to sources familiar with the matter, Amazon has quietly outpaced subscriber additions versus its more well-known competitors. A report by the Financial Times claims that Amazon Music Unlimited subscribers have grown by about 70% in the last year.
While the rate of growth is higher than that of Apple or Spotify's offerings, it still lags behind in total subscribers. In April, Amazon had about 32 million subscribers to all of its music services including both Unlimited and the free Amazon Prime Music tier, that accompanies an Amazon Prime subscription.
On June 27, Apple's Eddy Cue was clear about Apple Music's subscriber base. The executive said that Apple Music had exceeded 60 million paid subscribers, five months after it had hit 50 million nearly four years after launch.
Spotify broke 100 million subscribers in April after seven years of availability.
It isn't clear if the Financial Times subscriber numbers include trial subscriptions to the premium services.
Amazon Music Unlimited costs $7.99 a month for Prime subscribers, and $9.99 a month for non-subscribers. Amazon Prime Music contains a smaller subset of the music available on Amazon Music Unlimited, is free to Amazon Prime subscribers, and is included in reported figures from Amazon and in the Financial Times report.
Apple Music costs $9.99, with a family plan for multiple users available for $14.99 a month -- the same as the family plan for Amazon Music Unlimited. Spotify has a free tier, and Spotify Premium sells for $9.99 a month.
Comments
From the article since you missed reading it:
"Amazon Music Unlimited costs $7.99 a month for Prime subscribers"
EDIT: I've not ever used it either, but also a Prime member. So I clicked my Prime account, clicked Amazon Music at the top, and was taken to a free trial that becomes $7.99/month after the intro period. Still not an Amazon Prime Music subscriber.
Common sense would say it couldn't be counting every Prime subscriber. At last count there were over 100 million of them.
FWIW I don't think I'm in the subscriber count. Just counting everyone with Prime would make it far larger than Apple Music wouldn't it?
For example, if I search for Earth, Wind & Fire in Apple Music, I can see a list of their most popular songs. However, the list contains many duplicates, because Apple Music is incapable of determining that That's the Way of the World from the Greatest Hits album is the same song as That's the Way of the World on the That's the Way of the World album. Amazon Prime Music is smart enough to know they are the same song, so you don't hear that same song a dozen times. Shuffle also seems to work far better. If shuffle a playlist in Apple Music, it only plays the same 10 songs over and over again, even if I have 100 songs in that playlist.
Problem for Spotify is that Amazon, Apple, and Google can leverage their music services to add value to their other revenue streams, e.g., Amazon uses it to make their incrreasing Prime Membership fees more palatable. Spotify has lost hundreds of millions but it can't raise prices in a "commoditized" industry to offset those costs. That's why it is desperately trying to get exclusive podcasts, a likely fail in an effort to build another revenue stream. It's also why Spotify hurts artists by paying them about half of what Apple does, and why Spotify is desperately trying to use governments to go after Apple to slow down competition until it can be sold. I wonder what their attack will be against Amazon??
Spotify is just fine and making a profit now and growing fast. It’s also hands-down the best streaming service out there for sub-Hifi audio quality, best algorithms for curation of all of them, best interface, best 3rd party support, best in ease of use, most reliable, largest library...
It’s the most integrated service on Hifi components, has the largest industry acceptance, the largest advertising base, largest subscriber base and is king of the hill for a reason.
You are completely full of shit with a hate on for Spotify for some reason.