Beats Music bets on 'living, breathing' humans
Beats Music bets on 'living, breathing' humans
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Beats Music is the latest entry in Web music streaming
- Service is backed by music-industry heavyweights like Iovine, Reznor
- Service launched Tuesday, will cost $10 per month with no free option
Beats Music, an offshoot of the uber-successful headphone company Beats Electronics,
launched on Tuesday with a focus on mobile. It's available for Apple's
iPhone and iPods, Android devices and Windows phones. A specialized iPad
version is in the works.
It enters a crowded
landscape populated with the likes of Pandora and Spotify, Rhapsody and
Rdio and numerous other competitors. The difference, according to its
creators, will be Beats' human touch.
"No one was doing a music service; everyone was building a music server," Beats Music chief executive Ian Rogers told WIRED, a CNN content partner.
While other streaming
platforms will have bigger music catalogues, Beats is banking on its
more robust suggestion engine -- or, as a blog post Tuesday said, "bringing you the right song for right now."
Like other music
services, Beats will use a computer algorithm to help suggest new music
for you based on what you've already listened to. But that system
factors in things like gender and age in addition to your current
playlist.
It even considers which
songs you crank up the volume on, compared to which ones you listen to
quietly, and what you play during the work day compared to what you
stream at home.
And there's a team of
curators and behavioral scientists participating in the process as well.
In their blog post, the company plays up their involvement, while
taking a shot at competitors.
"In our experience, it's
always been a living, breathing human who has brought us that song we
fell in love with," the post reads. "We tried to remember a time a robot
found us magic, but all we could find were the times the robot made us
laugh: 'You like Pantera? Have you heard of Black Sabbath?' 'You like
Mumford and Sons? Here's another song with banjos!' "
Beats Music definitely brings some music-industry clout to the Web-streaming wars.
Super-producer Jimmy
Iovine, the chairman of Interscope Geffen A&M who has worked with
artists from Bruce Springsteen to Lady Gaga, is chairman of Beats Music
and co-founded Beats Electronics with Dr. Dre in 2006.
Trent Reznor, of Nine Inch Nails fame, is the company's chief creative officer.
The company is trying
something else that's different for the music-streaming business. Unlike
competitors like Spotify and Pandora, Beats Music will not have any
free options.
The service will cost
$10 a month. (There's currently a special for AT&T customers
offering service for up to five people for $15 per month).
Rogers says it's a model Beats is confident about.
"We know people will pay
for something where there is value," he told WIRED. "Enough people pay
for headphones, it's an exciting business. We think we can do the same
thing here."
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