What is BEAM? At first glance, it is not nice to your fans

Because they can only enjoy your music in the proprietary BEAM player. A fact that supposedly is countered by offering a rich multimedia experience. In that same proprietary browser.

Amplify’d from heedia.com
It is a Full Quality album, Downloadable and Playable only inside Beam platform.

  • Can be downloaded only if user knows the Beam Album Unlock Code(s) and upon download he may not share or copy it.

  • A Beam album is connected with an online Beam Browser enabling bands to present any information (announce gigs, sell advertising space, sell Cd’s or tickets, present their digital booklet, link with other networks.)

  • Every track is connected to the Online MP3 shop of your choise so that fans buy the MP3 in order to play them outside application.

Read more at heedia.com

 

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It’s about the relation with the fan

If the fans feel they are dealing directly with the artist, their willingness to pay increases. Bandcamp embodies this 100%, Topspin can embody this if the artist chooses to utilize it that way.

Amplify’d from latimesblogs.latimes.com
According to Francis, fans paid an average of more than $5 for the 84-cent album, a trend of generosity that Bandcamp founder Ethan Diamond said extends throughout the site, even as overall music sales continue to slide.
“I think a lot of it is the fans’ perception that they’re supporting the artist and they want to pay more when that’s what they perceive,” he said. With donations, “fans are paying about 50% more than whatever that minimum is.”

Read more at latimesblogs.latimes.com

 

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Beatles being paid directly by iTunes in deal

or not?

Amplify’d from www.reuters.com
According to industry sources, iTunes is paying the Beatles’ royalties from digital download sales in the United States directly to the band’s company, Apple Corps, and is paying the songwriting mechanical royalties directly to Sony/ATV Music Publishing, which controls most of the Beatles’ song catalog.
Under a standard contract, a label issues an album, licenses the songs from music publishers, collects all wholesale revenue from the retailers and then distributes royalties to the artist and the publisher.
For superstar artists, the royalty typically equals about 20%-25% of retail revenue. So in the case of iTunes’ Beatles sales, where tracks are sold to the merchant for about 90 cents and are retailed for $1.29, a standard contract with a typical superstar royalty rate of 20%-25% would pay the Beatles about 18 cents to 22.5 cents per track sale.
But because iTunes is making royalty payments to the Beatles and Sony/ATV, EMI may be treating its deal with the digital retailer as a licensing pact.

Read more at www.reuters.com

 

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