Jobs irate over proposed digital music price hike

Posted:
in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV edited January 2014
"Some leading music labels are in talks with online retailers to raise wholesale prices for digital music downloads in an attempt to capitalise on burgeoning demand for legal online music," the Financial Times is reporting. The move, which aims to secure the record labels a larger stake in the digital music arena, has reportedly left Apple chief executive Steve Jobs fuming. However, around this last year, Apple denied similar rumors published by The NY Post. "These rumors aren't true," Apple spokeswoman Natalie Sequeira said at the time. "We have multiyear agreements with the labels and our prices remain 99 cents a track." This is the second year in a row that talk of digital music price hikes have surfaced around the anniversary of the iTunes Music Store -- a period where Apple's contracts with the labels may be up for re-negotiation. The store first launched on April 28, 2003.
«134

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 62
    Well they either have a multi-year deal or not, and nobody around here knows that (or if they do, they won't post it if they know what's good for them). Since they seemed to state that they do, then this will be a non-issue.
  • Reply 2 of 62
    I hate the recording industry.

    edit: well, not the industry, the executives.
  • Reply 3 of 62
    pmjoepmjoe Posts: 565member
    Well, assuming Apple has a multi-year deal, I think it's past time Apple starts working on technologies to bypass the recording industry. Get their own iTunes Music Store label going, give musicians their fair cut to sign on directly and bypass the recording industry, have live streaming concerts, etc.
  • Reply 4 of 62
    hmurchisonhmurchison Posts: 12,439member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by pmjoe

    Well, assuming Apple has a multi-year deal, I think it's past time Apple starts working on technologies to bypass the recording industry. Get their own iTunes Music Store label going, give musicians their fair cut to sign on directly and bypass the recording industry, have live streaming concerts, etc.



    Then you have an issue with Apple Records which Apple computer is likely to lose..again.



    I don't know the veracity of this statement but it wouldn't suprise me. The music industry is ran by snakes and cutthroats. They own the content so they can raise prices just like anything. Filesharing is still an option but I guess they feel like they can sue or poision P2P to oblivion.
  • Reply 5 of 62
    Man.... if they do, I hope there would be action against that, like "We won´t buy any music for a day" or go protesting next to their buildings - especially the first option would be something they would notice.
  • Reply 6 of 62
    Quote:

    Originally posted by hmurchison

    Then you have an issue with Apple Records which Apple computer is likely to lose..again.





    Not if they make a seperate entity containing only iPod and iTunes, leaving Apple out of it completely...However, I may be talking out my arse...(most likely). But, I remember Amazon doing something really similar to this and it working well for them to get the market of "real" CD purchases. Private musicians could have Amazon sell their music and Amazon would take the order, then fill a backlog of the order until the musician shipped the items to Amazon. Then Amazon would handle all tracking, re-ordering etc. Give the Musicians their cut, and all was well and good. If perhaps Apple did not do anything but be a middle man, like it is now, and let the musicians have their "own" label, and just package it and re-sell it, then they would still be fine under the ruling. A lot like Amazon did. I think it could work, the only hard part being that there would be a lot of musicians tied to contracts and once Apple did this, we would probably see a huge decline in available files. I hope this is just a rumor, because if it is not then it could kill this whole legal digital music revolution, which would be very bad....
  • Reply 7 of 62
    Quote:

    Originally posted by pmjoe

    Well, assuming Apple has a multi-year deal, I think it's past time Apple starts working on technologies to bypass the recording industry. Get their own iTunes Music Store label going, give musicians their fair cut to sign on directly and bypass the recording industry, have live streaming concerts, etc.



    WTF?? I don't think Apple would ever want to get that vertically integrated on that side of the music business. Granted, technology is furthuring the democratization of the business, but I believe few of us outisde the business realize how much support for an artist is given by the major labels, i.e. there is so much more to it than just recording and distributing an album/single.



    So you would like to see Apple sign artists and release their material? OK, what about theirs and others catalogs? Who do you think owns the vast majority of the publishing, very few artists have control over that side of the equation.
  • Reply 8 of 62
    it would be a shame (not that I'm buying this story) but when the 45 died in the eighties so did a big part of the music biz.

    Young kids bought singles, when they got older and had more disposable income, they bought albums. Pretty simple.

    Then the music industry decided the singles market wasn't worth it and decided they had to make it worth while (raising prices), forgetting that they were "conditioning" kids to buy records, the single vanished.

    A few vague attempts to revive this market in CD form failed and eventually all music charts have become just barometers of airplay.

    Man, when I was a kid (60's) when the charts came out we'd be all over them, we studied them and argued over them like they were some kind of sacred text.

    Kids are starting to buy records again, the chart at iTMS actually mean something again, or they are starting to. You can look at the iTMS download chart and know that it means something.

    The only reason I could see for record companies hiking prices is that they realize that their insignificance is approaching rapidly. Young artists no longer need a butt-load of money to make a decent sounding record and their are now alternatives to established ways to market a record.
  • Reply 9 of 62
    pbg3pbg3 Posts: 211member
    Major labels 'force 70% price hike' on Apple

    By Tony Smith

    Published Friday 7th May 2004 11:26 GMT



    The world's five biggest music labels have successfully forced Apple to increase the prices it charges for songs on the online iTunes Music Store.



    As we reported back in April, the major labels have been engaged in negotiations with the Mac maker in a bid to persuade it to put up prices.



    According to a New York Post report today, citing sources close to the talks, all five have succeeded.



    The sources claim Apple has now signed agreements with EMI, Bertelsmann Music Group (BMG), Sony, Universal and Warner that will see prices on some songs rise from 99c to $1.25, an increase of over 26 per cent.



    Still, that's better than the $2.99 price point some labels had been pushing Apple to introduce.



    Album prices are going up too. Many are likely to continue to be offered for $9.99, but some are appearing in the ITMS for $16.99, a rise of 70 per cent.



    As one music industry source told The Register: "That will really ingratiate the public and discourage piracy, won't it?"



    Apple does appear to have had it way in other areas, however. The NYP's sources reckon the company did not agree to label demands that some artists' songs only be sold in album batches and not as individual tracks.



    In the past, some acts, most notably Radiohead and Metallica, have said they will not allow their songs to be offered individually. But that clearly runs against what many music consumers want: the ability to pick and choose the songs they want and not be stuck with all or nothing album offers. The old days of buying an entire album for one song are hopefully behind us.



    We'd say it's about time the music industry started thinking that way too. There will always remain a place for albums - CDs too - but artists and labels have to start thinking 'outside the disc' if they're to reach a new generation of consumers now empowered to buy exactly what they want.



    Other services may face similar demands, but there does seem to be a particular focus on Apple. Having established the market for legal downloads, Apple now seems to be facing a music industry paranoid about the power that success might bring the Mac maker
  • Reply 10 of 62
    the above article (from last year) posted by PBG3, is why I don't give credence to the new rumor.

    It was B/S then, so I see no reason to think it's not this time.
  • Reply 11 of 62
    The music distributors aren't afraid of the power that Apple has. This is strictly financial proposition to them. They figure that at the current run rate that Apple is seeing in a few years the revenues from digi downloads is going to be huge. Thus, if they ratchet up the costs right now they stand to profit even more. After all it's "their" content.



    Metallica and Radiohead have done well for themselves but who speaks up for the artists that don't get played on Clear Channels radio stations? Trust, I've purchased a lot of music that "made the cut" at $.99 but wouldn't make it at $1.99.



    I always new this was a weakness of iTMS/iPod. Apple doesn't own the content and hence is beholden to the studio "taking their ball and going home"



    Open letter to artists



    When are you guys going to take some responsibility for yourselve.



    When are you going to secure the rights to the very music you created painstakenly note by note lyric by lyric.



    How can you blame someone for stealing your music when you let some schmuck in a 3 piece suit steal your livelyhood and fund his mortgage.



    Wake up! Everyone out here has to bust their asses. Get busy busting yours and find a way to retain control over your music ...and your life.
  • Reply 12 of 62
    If anyone can stop the greedy bastards from gouging the listening public, it is Steve Jobs.



    He has a lot of credibility in the industry. He created the first (if not the only) viable legal digital music distribution business model. Many of the competitors like Dell, Wal-mart and Sony can cook the books so they can avoid revealing how poorly they are doing with their attempts to compete with the iPod/iTMS juggernaut.



    Also, as CEO of Pixar, Jobs is a full-time content creator (not just a gadget maker or retailer) so the music execs have to know that he is fully aware of the need to make money from art. Between his positions at both Apple and Pixar, there is no one more involved in the fight against piracy of intellectual property than Steve Jobs.



    If the money-grubbers ignore Jobs, they will have cooked their golden goose and all hell will break loose. It's not hard to find legal means to download free music if you look carefully at the laws of copyright. At 99 cents a song and $9.99 an album (delivered at astonishing speed), it's just not worth jumping through those hoops to stay within the law. If prices increase, this equation may need to be re-examined.
  • Reply 13 of 62
    good points.....but I'll play devil's advocate for the record companies......



    "why should we let Steve Jobs and APPLE use us as a loss leader so he can sell more freakin' iPods"?
  • Reply 14 of 62
    e1618978e1618978 Posts: 6,075member
    I think that it will be good for the world if popular music is more expensive (Brittney Spears songs for $3, say, while everyone else sells for 0.99).



    Hopefully it will mean that fewer people buy the crap at the top.
  • Reply 15 of 62
    hmurchisonhmurchison Posts: 12,439member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by superkarate monkeydeathcar

    good points.....but I'll play devil's advocate for the record companies......



    "why should we let Steve Jobs and APPLE use us as a loss leader so he can sell more freakin' iPods"?




    The iTunes music store isn't a loss leader. And the music industry doesn't care about iPods. Their focus is on profitting off of music. Hey they have every right to ask for more money. They own the content. It's just sad that they once again are appealing to their greed.
  • Reply 16 of 62
    e1618978e1618978 Posts: 6,075member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by hmurchison

    The iTunes music store isn't a loss leader. And the music industry doesn't care about iPods. Their focus is on profitting off of music. Hey they have every right to ask for more money. They own the content. It's just sad that they once again are appealing to their greed.



    The greed part is fine, but if they earn less money due to hiking their prices (and therefore getting fewer sales), then they got what they deserved.
  • Reply 17 of 62
    Quote:

    Originally posted by hmurchison

    The iTunes music store isn't a loss leader. And the music industry doesn't care about iPods. Their focus is on profitting off of music. Hey they have every right to ask for more money. They own the content. It's just sad that they once again are appealing to their greed.



    In the begginning iTMS was completely a loss leader....how many times did you hear "don't expect it to make a profit" and then Apple confounded everyone by making a "slight" profit before it's first year was over.



    I'll say again, I'm not believing this story is true. I think it's someone trying to stir the pot.
  • Reply 18 of 62
    applenutapplenut Posts: 5,768member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by blue2kdave

    Well they either have a multi-year deal or not, and nobody around here knows that (or if they do, they won't post it if they know what's good for them). Since they seemed to state that they do, then this will be a non-issue.



    I believe it has been said by Apple that they have a single year deal that they have renewed once already and soon again. Each time it is renewed, the process starts over. Hence, the changes in the DRM last year.
  • Reply 19 of 62
    rokrok Posts: 3,519member
    unless i am mistaken, the iTMS was a loss leader TO APPLE, since they were providing all the iron that those songs would reside on, and the account handling, the negotiations (and likely stupid-high legal fees), etc. but i don't think the losses were felt by the record companies very much, if at all.



    and they can't possible look at a competitor like napster and think that's goint to net them more money. "hmmmm, every time steve manages to get someone to buy a kelly clarkson song, that's money in our pocket, for that song. but with napster, someone pays their monthly fee, gets her entire album, plus every other album in our catalog, meaning that cost-per-song has shrunk by maybe 1000%, and when they get sick of her or our other artists, they cancel their subscription and move to someone else, or figure out how to pipe that signal through a recording app and keep it forever, and we're left with... uh... "



    the iTMS doesn't just move iPods. if the record execs can't see that, they're dumber than i thought.
  • Reply 20 of 62
    telomartelomar Posts: 1,804member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by superkarate monkeydeathcar

    In the begginning iTMS was completely a loss leader....how many times did you hear "don't expect it to make a profit" and then Apple confounded everyone by making a "slight" profit before it's first year was over.



    The iTMS was never a loss leader. It was expected to cover its own costs and turn a slim profit and it has always done that.
Sign In or Register to comment.