Music Geeks Rejoice: Spotify Hits America

Earnest Cavalli

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Music Geeks Rejoice: Spotify Hits America


After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally immigrated to the Land of the Free.

For those of you who don't spend all your free time researching online music applications unavailable in your nation, Spotify is something of a hybrid of Pandora and iTunes, with Google+-style social networking options thrown in for good measure.

From Wired Magazine's 2010 profile of the service [http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/12/mf_spotify/]:

[Spotify is] a stand-alone application that lets users listen to and share any song by any artist instantly and for free. And it's entirely legal. The service supports itself (and pays for music rights) with advertising and monthly subscriptions that unlock premium features such as the ability to store songs on an iPod, mobile phone, or tablet.

The key point here is that bit about "any song by any artist." The Spotify music library is bound only by the physical limitations of reality. If a song exists, you can find it on Spotify (or will find it in the near future).

Until today -- and barring any semantic arguments about beta tests -- Spotify has been available exclusively to people outside the US. The key stumbling block in bringing the service Stateside has long been the labyrinthine licensing system imposed by record companies fearful of the 'net's potential for collapsing the traditional music biz. No specific details have emerged, but some sort of agreement must have been reached between Spotify and the American record industry, as the service is now available in the States.

Whoa whoa whoa, don't rush out to download the Spotify client just yet. Due to overwhelming demand for the service, the company is strictly limiting the number of people who can join just yet. At the moment, the Spotify site asks prospective users to enter an email address to which the company will send an invitation code just as soon as it believes the Spotify servers can handle the strain [http://www.spotify.com/us/hello-america/].

Of course, that only applies if you're hoping to get your hands on the free version of the Spotify application. Those of you willing to shell out $5 to $10 per month for Spotify Premium or Spotify Unlimited respectively [http://www.spotify.com/us/get-spotify/overview/] can bypass the velvet rope and grab the software right this minute. Both options remove the advertisements that otherwise fund Spotify, and the Unlimited iteration lets you use Spotify on your mobile phone.

The rest of us will just have to wait for the company to bless us with an invitation code. I guess I'll be content listening to Pandora in the meantime, but the overwhelming lack of rare Matson Jones live tracks is severely cramping my enthusiasm.

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Rblade

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the free part has become a bit of a joke with only 10 hours of music per month (although it adds a quarter of that each week, still very little)

but it's incredible value for 5 bucks. awesome program.

10 dollar deal is basicly for people with smarthphones or that live in an area with alot internet blackouts :p.

All music you ever want to listen to legal, except for metallica and the Beatles ofcourse, cheap money grubbing pricks they are.
 

Giest4life

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Feb 13, 2010
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Words are generally used correctly on this website and the rules of grammar followed adequately--this post, however, does not display that trend.

You don't emigrate "to" a country, you emigrate "from" it.
In the excerpt of this story:
After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally emigrated to the Land of the Free.
it should be
"After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally immigrated to the Land of the Free.
 

Owlgravy

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Sep 10, 2009
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If you like listening to a song more than five times, don't get your hopes up.

After a good period of unlimited free music (with exception to certain premium exclusives, which I'm cool with), they decided that for free users there would be a limit.

Before anyone criticizes me for complaining about a free service, I would like to point out that the whole point of it was free music to listen to at any time, only needing to pay for additional services. By implementing the limit, it stop users who wouldn't have had a way to listen to the music any other way, and don't have the money to buy the songs themselves.

-Gravy

Edit: If any of the above has actually changed since it was implemented, I haven't been on for a long while. That's my excuse.
 

Gethsemani_v1legacy

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As someone from Europe who is shelling out about 15 dollars for the premium service each month (to be able to use Spotify on my Android phone), I have to say that Spotify is extremly price worthy. The five dollar month subscription is basically a steal if you listen to music regularly.
 

sneakypenguin

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In other words another music service. I'll use pandora, Last FM, tune in radio, or google music beta to satisfy my free music needs. I guess another service doesnt hurt though.
 

Littaly

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Jun 26, 2008
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Yeah, the free version is a bit limited, but $5 a month is the most "worth it" a service like this will ever get. No Zeppelin, no Pink Floyd and no Beatles, but otherwise there's pretty much everything.

Now...
After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally emigrated to the Land of the Free.
Three years? You think that's bad? They're not even talking about giving us Netflix over here, in any shape or form :mad:

So I guess what I'm saying is, can you return the favor? Plz o.o
 

Earnest Cavalli

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Jun 19, 2008
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Giest4life said:
Words are generally used correctly on this website and the rules of grammar followed adequately--this post, however, does not display that trend.

You don't emigrate "to" a country, you emigrate "from" it.
In the excerpt of this story:
After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally emigrated to the Land of the Free.
it should be
"After years of taunting American music fans from across The Pond, Spotify has finally immigrated to the Land of the Free.
You've got me there. Vowels are anathema to my people.
 

killgannon

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Jan 19, 2009
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TheRightToArmBears said:
Yeah, any song for free...

5 times.

Screw Spotify. Go Grooveshark.
I was going to say the exact same thing, I gave up on Spotify the second I found out about Grooveshark as I'm sure many have since and many more will once they realise just how limited Spotify is. It's a shame really, it used to be amazing.
 

NLS

Norwegian Llama Stylist
Jan 7, 2010
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Spotify is the party killer app.
That said, yes it was sad that they nerfed the free option even further a few months ago. However, the 5$ plan isn't too bad if all you want is music (and can do without smart phones or no internet, in which case you'll need 10$).

Off-topic: I remember seeing an ad on the bus once that listed a bunch of known brand names and companies. The end line was that all of them were swedish and that if it wasn't for oil, Norway would be nothing.
Damnit, why didn't WE invent Spotify first. Sweden taking all the good ideas first...