Originally posted by kea
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Originally posted by kea View PostI wonder how much is due to labels pulling out? First Hyperion, then Chandos and Oehms Classics earlier this year, now Naxos, BIS and Profil within the last few days (and presumably the rest of the Naxos-distributed labels will follow shortly). Like... if your streaming service keeps losing music, of course people are less likely to subscribe.
I wonder if the labels are intentionally trying to kill it, and if so, why.
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Originally posted by kea View Post
I wonder if the labels are intentionally trying to kill it, and if so, why.
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Originally posted by mahlerei View PostMy contact at Qobuz assures me this is a short-term problem, and that a clarifying statement will be issued at some point. Make of that what you will....It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I'm not totally sure about kea's list: as I understood it, Hyperion have always declined to take part in any streaming services. They've never been available on either Spotify or Qobuz, as far as I remember (and I've been using Spotify for some years now).
I really hope Qobuz does/has sorted out its cash flow issues... What I very much value with their service is the frequent availability of the booklets (not for every issue, but for most of the recent ones), and the good coverage of European HIPP-flavoured labels.
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Agree about Hyperion - you also don't find it on Google Play Music All Access (Spotify equivalent) nor Naxos Music Library. Nor Testament recordings. Obviously a decision in principle to withhold their content from streaming. (Actually you might find the odd album on one of these services but its the exception that proves there is a rule).
As to downloads, Hyperion of course has had its own site since before Qobuz, and recently their site has started to handle downloads from Signum & Linn as well.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostFirst guess would be Quobuz is behind on royalty payments.
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt could be because the recording companies are effectively employing a "middle-man" whom they consider to be unnecessary. Alternatively (and this is my view) anything that discourages people from buying their products may be counterproductive in the long run. Also, I feel this is very much the case with downloads, as it goes against the collector's instincts.
Originally posted by ostuni View PostI'm not totally sure about kea's list: as I understood it, Hyperion have always declined to take part in any streaming services. They've never been available on either Spotify or Qobuz, as far as I remember (and I've been using Spotify for some years now).
I really hope Qobuz does/has sorted out its cash flow issues... What I very much value with their service is the frequent availability of the booklets (not for every issue, but for most of the recent ones), and the good coverage of European HIPP-flavoured labels.
There are a couple of other labels that "don't do streaming", ECM New Series and MDG being the major ones. Qobuz has a couple of others that have offered albums for download but never streaming: Channel Classics (can be streamed on Spotify, but apparently didn't get along with Qobuz for some reason) and Mode Records are two that come to mind. Chandos and Oehms had extensive catalogues (1000-2000 albums iirc) that were all streamable, until a few months ago when they became download-only.
Naxos apparently isn't totally gone, they just deleted about 7000 of their albums from Qobuz, including almost all releases from the last 5-6 years and huge random chunks of the earlier ones. BIS, similarly, still has 14 albums available for streaming, though that may just be an oversight. (Other, smaller labels that deleted almost all of their catalogues in recent months but are still sort of on board: Albany, Bridge, New World, Kairos)
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Originally posted by Stunsworth View PostWhy some labels have disappeared from Qobuz...
http://blogsv2.qobuz.com/qobuz-blog-...able-on-qobuz/
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Originally posted by Stunsworth View PostWhy some labels have disappeared from Qobuz...
http://blogsv2.qobuz.com/qobuz-blog-...able-on-qobuz/
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThanks for that, Steve. Once it becomes clear which catalogues are proving the most difficult to bring back to the fold, I, and maybe others, can start avoiding buying their products, other than as 'pre-owned'.
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Originally posted by Stunsworth View PostWhy some labels have disappeared from Qobuz...
http://blogsv2.qobuz.com/qobuz-blog-...able-on-qobuz/
Still abusing the word "digital" I see. . .
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