Advertisement
Advertisement

In the wake of the Apple Music announcement, record labels and artists have been appreciative of Apple’s industry-high revenue-sharing offer (Apple is offering artists 71.5% of revenues, versus a standard 70%), but labels — in particular those representing indie artists — blasted the company’s decision not to pay artists anything during customers’ three-month free trial.

Although Apple argued that the higher revenue share would lead to greater payouts over time, artists worried that anyone releasing a new album during the first three months of Apple Music’s existence would receive diddly squat.

Although this is a big win for Ms Swift, there’s a few questions that still need answering: namely, will 1989 now be available on Apple Music, and how much revenue will Apple be sharing with artists during the 3-month trial period?

Advertisement

Update: According to Recode’s Peter Kafka, Apple will be paying artists on a different, per-stream basis during the free trial, rather than the revenue-sharing model used for paying subscribers.


Contact the author at chris@gizmodo.com.