I've been a musician since I was 6.
I learned 'She loves you by the Beatles on guitar. It's pretty straightforward.
Since then, I have used hundreds of online music resources and dozens of music publication websites. Each has been a very present intermediary manipulating the platform, separating me from my audience, and taking a fee.
Music is one of those industries where 90% of the revenue accrues to the top 10% of creators and businesses. It's just commerce. So much so that it's treated as a commodity. To a purely business-minded individual, all music is fungible.
That's why you'll find the same problems in the music business as in global commerce: too many fee-taking intermediaries controlling what we buy.
These intermediaries benefit far more than deserved and hold back underfunded artists - the 90% majority - while proclaiming that they are the ones who are enabling the artists to have any footing in the first place.
Unless you're someone like The Weeknd, you're probably being screwed over.
Thankfully, there are blockchains. Thankfully, there are visionaries.
Thankfully, there is Audius, Royal, and Catalog.
Audius
Audius aims to enhance artist compensation by enabling them to connect and transact with their fans directly. They do so through several decentralized applications and public blockchain infrastructures.
At the time of writing, over 5 million users are curating and listening to content on the platform. Many compare it to a decentralized SoundCloud, although it could become its own streaming giant with its AUDIO token incentives and decentralized governance structures.
Audius.org Landing Page
There are five main components of the Audius protocol, as listed in their White Paper.
An efficient token economy powered by the Audius platform token AUDIO, 3rd-party stablecoins, and artist tokens.
A decentralized storage solution and ledger for sharing audio and metadata.
A unique track encryption scheme paired with a programmable mechanism to unlock user-specific proxy re-encryption keys for content,
A discovery protocol for users to efficiently query metadata.
A decentralized governance protocol whereby artists, node operators, and fans are individually and collectively enfranchised in decision-making about protocol changes and upgrades.
The goal is to combine these elements and share the platform's success with the users who make it successful.
Imagine being paid in Facebook shares the more you bring value to the platform.
The Audius content lifecycle displayed above shows the variety of actors in the ecosystem and their roles in maintaining its decentralization.
AUDIO
Operating nodes require 500,000 AUDIO to be staked, and the reward is more AUDIO tokens. Artists are rewarded with AUDIO tokens each week for various achievements, such as having the most liked song, the most shared song, etc.
Audio tokens have three purposes:
Securing the network by incentivizing nodes to operate.
Governing future proposals submitted to the DAO.
Feature Access - Earning multipliers, badges, etc.
"Audius tokens exist to align governance and financial incentives that increase protocol usage and create long-term protocol value." - Audius White Paper.
I created an Audius account in late 2020, and it's been interesting. It's very similar to SoundCloud and seems to have a few features.
There was a good interview by Jason Calcanis (J Cal) on his TWIST (This Week in Startups) Podcast with Roneil Rumburg, the founder and CEO of Audius. It's worth listening to if you want to understand Audius' unique international governance.
Audius is far ahead of any competitor, has a considerable market to break into, and is already very successful. Users and artists are encouraged to take advantage of the platform's opportunities and share the future upside as network effects and Metcalfe's law kick in.
Royal
Royal was only announced a few weeks ago, but it involves some big names and will surely be a force in the future. It'll be a marketplace for artists to sell NFTs of a select percentage of their works.
These NFTs are "embedded ownerships in the master recording, earnings royalties from income-producing activities such as streaming." according to the company.
The goal is to enable NFTs to be the medium that transforms music royalties into a decentralized asset class. Anyone will be able to trade royalties from wallet to wallet freely. This sounds a lot like my idea from April 2021. Oh well.
JD Ross, the founder of real estate venture Opendoor, and famed DJ, 3LAU, founded Royal with a $16 million seed round from Paradigm and Peter Thiel's Founders Fund. 3LAU recently sold a re-release of an album as a collection of NFT for $11.6 million, where the top 33 bids were accepted. He's becoming the Beeple of music NFTs.
I subscribed to the early access and was impressed to see 202.419K people ahead of me.
Royal Early Access Ranking
Catalog
Self-described as a record press, an auction house, and an open music library, Catalog has quickly built a name for itself.
It's a platform for musicians to release works as 1 of 1 NFTs. While still in beta, Catalog has enabled fans to pay artists over $400,000 using NFT records.
Artists collect 100% of the sales revenue and can accept bids on work at any time. Each time the NFT is sold in a secondary market, the artist receives a predetermined creator share.
The works do not exist on any individual server but on the Ethereum blockchain and are purchased with ETH. They are directly transacted from the artist to the fan and can have special features such as unlocking access to discords or anything the artist wants to include in their sale.
Unlike Royal NFTs, Catalog NFTs do not represent royalty claims.
I am a fan of the user interface. It's simple, effective, and leaves room to breathe. I initially found out about Catalog after coming across loft.radio.
loft.radio
loft.radio was a previous project built by the developers of Catalog as an experiment. You can see the origin of Catalog's wonderful user interface below.
Loft.radio is the first decentralized radio station.
Well, not entirely.
The developers curated the artists, but since the website's inception, it has simply been music playing 24/7 from various artists within similar genres while enabling fans to tip them directly with ETH.
Much like Catalog, 100% of the revenue goes to the artists. This is an excellent precedent.
loft revolves around different lo-fi beats and is excellent to have in the background of laziness or productivity. I use it all the time - it's on my bookmarks bar.
Conclusion
Aside from a few outlier purchases, NFT mania has strangely left out music & audio NFTs. The infrastructure around them and their cultural understanding is quickly becoming more prescient, but there is still far to go.
Royal & Catalog doesn't have tokens and is not trying to build platforms that compete with the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. Instead, they are enabling artists to decentralize ownership and generate revenue streams that have never existed.
Every decade or so, the music industry gets disrupted. In the early 80s it was tapes taking over records; in the 90s it was CDs taking over tapes; in the 00s it was Napster & Limewire destroying the record label's business models; in the 10s, it was Spotify and streaming; and now in the roaring 20s, its blockchain & NFTs.
What will it be in 2030?
Links
Audius: Website | Music Player | Twitter | White Paper | Github
Royal: Website | Twitter | 3LAU.com | 3LAU Twitter
Catalog: Website | Twitter | Discord | loft.radio