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// Published on January 21, 2016
// Published on January 21, 2016

// Published on Jan 21, 2016

//

//

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0 MIN. READ

// Industry Insight

// Industry Insight

// Industry Insight

iTunes Radio will become a paid service next month

Alexandre Trochut

January 21 · 2016

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Alexandre Trochut

Editor-in-Chief

Jan 21 · 2016

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Alexandre Trochut

Written by Alexandre Trochut

Published in Culture

01.21.2016

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Published in

Culture

January 21 · 2016

0 min read

Alexandre Trochut

0 Min. Read

Culture

Archived Content

This article is part of BPM Magazine’s archives, preserved to document the evolution of electronic music culture. It may reflect the context, trends, and information available at the time of publication.

01.21.2016 · 12:00 AM

Launched three years ago and based on the same principle as Pandora, Apple' online radio service "iTunes Radio" leaves the freemium and is set to become a paid service starting from next month. In an email sent to its customers, Apple has indicated that this change will affect iTunes Radio by 29 January, before joining the offer Apple Music.

Launched three years ago and based on the same principle as Pandora, Apple' online radio service "iTunes Radio" leaves the freemium and is set to become a paid service starting from next month. In an email sent to its customers, Apple has indicated that this change will affect iTunes Radio by 29 January, before joining the offer Apple Music. 


Initially launched in 2013 and immediately proposed as a free listening service with the ability for brands to distribute promotional content, iTunes Radio leaves behind Beats 1 as the only freemium music service brand of Apple' catalog and is not insignificant.

Close to many existing online radio services, iTunes Radio does not allow to control the broadcast of music and looks more like a purchase tool on the store iTunes. A user can't move forward or back during the broadcast of a title, and the platform allows only 6 "skips" in an hour. You can neither replay a song that you would have liked.

It's hard to understand why Apple is making this move of including this service (clearly obsolete) to Apple Music - which already offers radio stations by genre much more complete and flexible. The answer could be in the new policy undertaken by Apple which aims to stop all services sponsored by advertising: recently, iAds division that managed partnerships with brand for its advertising space was closing. Some think that it's just the end of this service but in a soft way to not hurt his customers feelings.

Starting January 29, if you want to keep on listening to iTunes Radio stations like "Pure Pop," "Soundsystem," and "On the Floor," you'll have to do so with a subscription of Apple Music's $9.99-a-month paywall.

Launched three years ago and based on the same principle as Pandora, Apple' online radio service "iTunes Radio" leaves the freemium and is set to become a paid service starting from next month. In an email sent to its customers, Apple has indicated that this change will affect iTunes Radio by 29 January, before joining the offer Apple Music.

Launched three years ago and based on the same principle as Pandora, Apple' online radio service "iTunes Radio" leaves the freemium and is set to become a paid service starting from next month. In an email sent to its customers, Apple has indicated that this change will affect iTunes Radio by 29 January, before joining the offer Apple Music. 


Initially launched in 2013 and immediately proposed as a free listening service with the ability for brands to distribute promotional content, iTunes Radio leaves behind Beats 1 as the only freemium music service brand of Apple' catalog and is not insignificant.

Close to many existing online radio services, iTunes Radio does not allow to control the broadcast of music and looks more like a purchase tool on the store iTunes. A user can't move forward or back during the broadcast of a title, and the platform allows only 6 "skips" in an hour. You can neither replay a song that you would have liked.

It's hard to understand why Apple is making this move of including this service (clearly obsolete) to Apple Music - which already offers radio stations by genre much more complete and flexible. The answer could be in the new policy undertaken by Apple which aims to stop all services sponsored by advertising: recently, iAds division that managed partnerships with brand for its advertising space was closing. Some think that it's just the end of this service but in a soft way to not hurt his customers feelings.

Starting January 29, if you want to keep on listening to iTunes Radio stations like "Pure Pop," "Soundsystem," and "On the Floor," you'll have to do so with a subscription of Apple Music's $9.99-a-month paywall.

Apple|Apple Music|Beats 1|Featured|freemium|iTunes Radio|News|Pandora|radio Streaming|radio Streaming service|streaming|streaming service

Written by Alexandre Trochut

Apple|Apple Music|Beats 1|Featured|freemium|iTunes Radio|News|Pandora|radio Streaming|radio Streaming service|streaming|streaming service

Written by Alexandre Trochut

iTunes Radio will become a paid service next month