Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Stream of Conscience? Live Music Streaming: Utility, Capital and Control Cover

Stream of Conscience? Live Music Streaming: Utility, Capital and Control

By: Arthur Ehlinger and  John Markey  
Open Access
|Apr 2022

Abstract

This article takes a look at the ever expanding and increasingly commercially significant world of live music streaming through the nexus of electronic dance music. After charting the history of live music streaming, the article outlines the positive impacts that live music streaming has on promotion, sales and preservation of rare ethno-folk musics. However, interviews with industry insiders reveal opaque practices, where copyright enforcement is specifically utilised by a few large broadcasters in such a way as to maintain the dominance of their position within the live music streaming industry. A heightened agency in the hands of major corporations over what music audiences can see or hear is also identified. This article concludes that as live music streaming is co-opted across more music genres, these opaque practices will likely transfer across genre boundaries too. As such, it is important for live music streaming to come under further examination within the academy.

Language: English
Page range: 29 - 42
Submitted on: Dec 1, 2021
Accepted on: Jan 20, 2022
Published on: Apr 8, 2022
Published by: International Music Business Research Association (IMBRA)
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2022 Arthur Ehlinger, John Markey, published by International Music Business Research Association (IMBRA)
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.