Spotify’s 40 million tunes won’t go far with CD-happy Japanese

epa05561886 The logo of the Spotify app is pictured on a smartphone screen in Tokyo, Japan, 29 September 2016. Spotify music streaming service was launched in Japan, the world's second largest music market, on 29 September 2016. The entry into the Japanese market comes late due to copyright-related problems and other specifics of the Japanese market.  EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON

 

AP

On a recent muggy afternoon in Tokyo, 21-year old Shintaro Naganuma joined several hundred customers browsing CDs at the eight-story downtown outpost of music retail chain Tsutaya.
Having discovered a couple of new rock artists on YouTube, the third-year university student hit Tsutaya Co.’s flagship store in trendy Shibuya to look up their albums. That process encapsulates the dilemma now facing Spotify Ltd.’s head Daniel Ek, who on Thursday presided over the music streaming service’s long-awaited entry into the world’s second-largest music market.
On the one hand, the nation’s consumers have grown accustomed to finding music or listening casually through smartphones, which should help the Swedish company attract users for its free ad-supported version. But when it comes time to hand over the cash, most people in Japan continue to buy CDs and even vinyl. That’s largely because record labels remain wary of signing away their music to streaming services.
Even Apple Inc. and messaging service Line Corp., which introduced paid streaming services last year,
have yet to take off in part because
of limited song-availability. As a result, physical sales still dominate, making up 84 percent of the industry’s
sales last year, compared to 39 percent globally.
“Record labels hate to give music away for free, so Spotify’s initial
inventory could look even worse than Line Music or Apple Music,” said Mikiro Enomoto, a commentator on the nation’s music industry who teaches popular culture at Kyoto Seika University. “These streaming services probably only have about half of the songs on Oricon’s charts,” he said, referring to Japan’s equivalent of Billboard rankings.
Some of that was evident at Spotify’s launch event, where executives shied away from mentioning any label deals or highlighting prominent Japanese acts. The company didn’t take questions from the press and a spokesman suggested reporters browse the app to see which artists were available. Fewer than half the artists responsible for Oricon’s Top 10 albums of 2015 — including boy band idols Arashi and national icon Mr. Children — were on the service as of Thursday afternoon. Instead, the company unveiled a new feature that will show lyrics while tracks are playing, hoping to pull karaoke-loving Japanese users who want to sign along with their favorite songs.
Entering the market a year after Apple and Line also means the novelty of streaming services has worn off, said Akiko Senoo, senior researcher at digital consultant MMD Labo. Still, she sees promise in Spotify’s integration with Facebook Inc., which should help it acquire users through word-of-mouth. “The industry is certainly buzzing because Spotify has entered the market, but it will take time for users to get excited,” Senoo said. “Growth will probably be weak at the outset, but as people began to see on their Facebook feeds that their friends are listening to Spotify songs, usage should spread slowly.”
The irony for the music industry is that just eight years ago, Japan was home to the world’s most advanced mobile music market. Speedy networks and strong record label cooperation allowed mobile phone owners to download music to their devices. Sales of songs and ringtones surged to 79.8 billion yen ($790 million) in 2008, nearly tripling from 2005. Digital accounted for a fourth of all music revenue in the country, outpacing the rest of the world’s 20 percent.
Then the iPhone came along. It had limited support for ringtones and a cumbersome iTunes system that forced users to download songs through their computers. Consumers embraced the product anyway for its apps and other innovations, but digital music sales plunged in Japan and never recovered. Despite a small uptick over the past two years, it remains at less than half its 2008 level.
“Back then, Japan’s ecosystem was actually working better than iTunes,” said Enomoto. “But the iPhone’s debut destroyed it. And as smartphone users learned to listen to music for free through YouTube, buying songs on iTunes never took off.”

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