4.3 Article

License to stream? A study of how rights-holders have responded to music streaming services in Norway

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CULTURAL POLICY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 61-73

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10286632.2021.1908276

Keywords

Streaming services; music licensing; copyright; music industry

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [271962]

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This article delves into the impact of streaming services on the music industry, focusing on the process of copyright holders getting paid through streaming and the development of relationships between licensors and licensees. It finds that the rise of streaming services has led to competition between major and indie labels for rights and global market shares, and the bargaining power of collecting societies now hinges on how on-demand access to music is legally defined. So far, composers have found these struggles to be less challenging than performers in the music industry.
This article rewinds a decade to reconstruct the arrival of streaming services and their impact on the music industry. It focuses on copyright holders and their experience with reaching out and getting paid via streaming, charting developments in the relationship between licensor and licensee such as the rise of direct licensing. The study is based on interviews with labels, publishers, collecting societies and interest organisations for composers and performers in Norway, where streaming caught on early. It finds that streaming services, with Spotify out in front, have led majors and indies to wage a war over rights and global market shares, while the ability of collecting societies to hang on to their bargaining cards now depends on the way in which on-demand access to music is legally defined. This article also concludes that, so far, these struggles have been easier on the composers than on the performers of music.

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