Martin Stiksel, Last.fm co-founder, said: "We are giving the listener free
access to what is basically the best jukebox in the world.
"The ability to dip into such a broad catalogue from your laptop, home or
office computer, and listen to whatever you want for free, represents a new way
of consuming music that might change the way you listen to music.
"In that respect, nobody else can currently offer what Last.fm is offering
right now."
Last.fm is also launching an 'Artist Royalty' arrangement, whereby unsigned
artists who upload their music to Last.fm will receive payment from Last.fm
every time one of their tracks is played.
This should allow artists without traditional recording or publishing deals
to reach millions of music fans, and to offer their music for free while still
generating revenue.
"We are building a platform to help redesign the music economy, enabling artists
and labels to earn revenue according to how people listen, rather than how they
buy," said Last.fm co-founder Felix Miller.
"Now we can offer the arrangement to unsigned music creators too. For the
first time, anyone can upload tracks and get paid when those tracks are played.
"It is a whole different model that benefits the artists, labels and
advertisers, but most of all the listeners."
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