Amazon music playlist
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We also use these cookies to understand how customers use our services (for example, by measuring site visits) so we can make improvements. Read our analysis of the CMA’s report, and its decision not to refer a full-blown market investigation of streaming music and the music industry, here.We use cookies and similar tools that are necessary to enable you to make purchases, to enhance your shopping experiences and to provide our services, as detailed in our Cookie Notice. “The single largest mechanism through which music was streamed was ‘user curated’ playlists at 42%.” “Around 20% of streams were from playlists provided by the streaming service (as opposed to playlists created by the user themselves) and a further 11% of streams were delivered through autoplay functions on streaming services or ‘stations/radio’ provided by streaming services,” it explains. (Caveat: if the latter two are closer to the top end of the 5-10% range shown in the table, and the former two closer to the bottom of their 10-20% range, it may not be such a big difference.)īesides this individual breakdown, the CMA’s report provides a summary of this data across all streaming services too. YouTube Music has a much bigger chunk of algotorial streams than the other three, while editorial takes a slightly bigger share of streams on Apple and Amazon’s services than on Spotify or YouTube Music. Amazon Music has a lot more streams coming from its stations/radio features than the other streaming services. Spotify has a much higher percentage of user-curated streams, with its three rivals indexing much higher on non-playlist streams. Here’s the table (if you’re on a device where it isn’t displaying, you can also find it here): It divides streams into six categories: editorial (playlists curated by humans at the service) algotorial (playlists curated by algorithms) station/radio (their radio-like features) autoplay (tracks that automatically play when a playlist finishes, served up by an algorithm) user curated (playlists made by listeners and other curators who don’t work at the service) and non-playlist (everything else).
![amazon music playlist amazon music playlist](https://i.imgur.com/qIMbNdg.png)
The table is based on the CMA’s analysis of data provided by four streaming services: Spotify, YouTube Music, Apple Music and Amazon Music. So while it’s UK-only, the data is sure to be of wider interest. They’re in a table on page 44 of the report which breaks down “streams on playlist type as a % of UK streams by music streaming service in 2021”.
#Amazon music playlist update
Tags: Amazon Music Apple Music CMA Playlists Spotify YouTube YouTube MusicĪ fascinating question, eh? And thanks to t his morning’s update report from UK competition regulator the CMA, we now have some answers.