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Music Technology

Coronavirus: Radio Listening Booms While Music Streaming Stalls (bbc.com) 65

People staying at home due to the coronavirus pandemic appear to be listening to more radio rather than music apps, figures suggest. The BBC reports: Global, which owns Capital FM and talk station LBC, said online radio listening had risen by 15%. The BBC said streaming of its radio stations had risen 18% since last week. Meanwhile, data from two US analytics companies suggested use of music-streaming apps such as Spotify had dipped by about 8%.

According to trusted music industry monitor BuzzAngle, US music streaming between 13-19 March fell by 8.8% compared with the previous week. Rolling Stone magazine, which uses a different data provider, Alpha Data, said streams were down 7.8%. But not all services are equally affected. Classical music site Primephonic said streaming had gone up by about 20% since isolation measures had been introduced in Europe.
"There are likely to be multiple causes," said BBC News music reporter Mark Savage. "Fewer people are commuting to work or going to the gym and shops that use Spotify for their in-store music are closing their doors. People who stream music in the office also seem to be turning off and watching Netflix instead and there's a big rise in radio listening - suggesting we're seeking companionship alongside our music."
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Coronavirus: Radio Listening Booms While Music Streaming Stalls

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  • Color me surprised (Score:4, Insightful)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @06:31AM (#59877116)

    Online music does not bring you the latest news about Covid-19. Online radio does.

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Spotify now has a playlist that mixes NPR News with music, but it still doesn't really offer you any local news options.

    • Covid-19 didn't kill the Radio Star

      If you are old enough you will know what I'm going on about.

    • by rho ( 6063 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @10:07AM (#59877588) Journal

      We've let one of the greatest mass communications mediums go to shit. FM and AM radio are fantastic ways to spread information far and wide at minimal cost. Nothing even comes close to the price/performance of radio. The last time radio got a big boost was during Katrina. Millions of people were without power, but a cheap FM radio and a couple of AA batteries would keep people up-to-date for next to nothing.

      I'd really like to see radio renaissance. Break up the conglomerates and lower the licensing costs to the point where local radio makes business sense again. If you never grew up with a great local DJ you wouldn't understand, but it's awesome.

      • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @10:22AM (#59877646)

        I have a Chinese no-name "vintage" radio with USB port for MP3s, casette player and AM/FM/SW radio tuner. It was $25 and can be powered by 4xAA batteries or regular power grid. I have been using it on batteries to listen to radio or MP3s while working outdoors in my courtyard or annex. Average listening time is less than 1h per day but I put batteries in it 6 months ago and is still going strong. The tuner is analogic, rotate a knob to change frequencies, rotate another knob to increase/decrease volume. No fancy touchscreen shit or anything that no longer works if a certain chip fails.
        Nothing can successfully replace a simple portable radio in terms of power consumption, mobility and ease of use.

      • I haven't listed to broadcast radio in over 15 years. Its nothing but commercials and playlists that are set in stone. Once in a while I get the urge to build a pirate transmitter and do some broadcasting of my own. The FCC doesn't show up until you broadcast 24x7 for a month or so. If you have an SDR device tune to the CB channels. There's still a few active oddball characters around here.

        • by rho ( 6063 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @10:52AM (#59877750) Journal

          There used to be great radio. College radio stations launched the careers of some great local bands. Public radio stations still have some great local programming. It's all ads and boring playlists because they're owned and managed by beancounters in some office 1200 miles away.

          Break up the media companies. A diverse media landscape is a healthy media landscape.

        • It's always been that way or haven't you been paying attention? BTW there are stations that don't totally stick to that format you just have to look for them.
      • Mod you up. I was 'raised on radio' and think broadcast media, both radio and television, are still great and should never go away. You can build an AM broadcast radio receiver with five components: coil, tuning capacitor, detector diode, filter capacitor, and headphones (or some sort of small audio amplifier), and just about anything for an antenna; if you use high-impedance headphones it doesn't even require any power source, and a small headphone amplifier can run off a single AA battery. Try that with '
    • That's why I still pay for a Sirius subscription. No commercials but they do have live DJs.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    More likely it is because radio has news included in it. And also contains a lot of local news coverage and commentary - two things you don't get from just listening to spotify and other music streaming sites. Youtube is good for news but is hard to find the most recent local news. Spotify won't interupt your music if some very late breaking important annoucement pops up.

  • What are the people here listening to? Recommendations for others?
    • by Stephen Chadfield ( 7971 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @07:16AM (#59877170) Homepage

      BBC World Service

    • Sirius XM has a channel devoted entirely to coronavirus coverage and information, I believe it's 121.
    • The best links are internet-radio.com and radio.net since everything is listed there.
    • by havana9 ( 101033 )
      It repends on the area. I being in Italy normally listen RAI, the public broadcaster. They transmit local news, that are useful. BBC world service is also transmitted in a DAB channel, but I normally listen to regular FM.
    • I used to listen to Alpha Centauri 59.534GHz, but after hearing their racist point of view about "blue skins", I switched to Proxima Centauri 98.659GHz.

      • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

        I can't listen to intergalactic radio. Everything is old news. That shit about the blueskins? It's already over, man, you just haven't been told yet. You gotta let that shit go.

      • by Jamu ( 852752 )
        I tried 4.46233627 GHz but there's only an engineering show which they keep repeating.
  • by R80_JR ( 1094843 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @06:52AM (#59877150)
    Most of the time, I listen to radio on real radios (superheterodynes or software-defined). Old school, yes, and not measured in the streaming statistics.
    • by havana9 ( 101033 )
      I am in the same camp. I'm now using a '90s Kenwood stereo tuner, but I'm sometime use a satellite receiver to listen abroad radios. Unfoerunately using AM radio (from long waves to short waves) downtown became difficult because cheap switching power supplies and LED lamps.
    • That's great, if you don't mind suffering through 15 minutes of commercials per hour!

  • by pgmrdlm ( 1642279 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @07:11AM (#59877166) Journal
    Was either when I was on the bus or driving to work.
    I haven't really streamed music. But I have been, as always was my habit. Of reading news off the web. which includes local news from a couple sources.

    I just couldn't handle all the commercials, which is also why I never or very rarely watch the news. Description of the news would also be too short. I don't want sound bites. And I also don't want to hear bloody commercials.
  • was Justin Bieber's comeback! Who needs Corona radio when we have that stache!
  • It is critical for every musician to produce the equivalent of this Ugandan song [youtube.com] for their local markets, and to get it broadcast on all of their local radio stations.
  • At work I listen to streaming. At home I listen to CDs.

    Radio? You mean shitty music with way too many commercials? No thanks.
  • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @08:31AM (#59877288)
    British Home Front Radio of course: http://www.1940sukradio.co.uk/... [1940sukradio.co.uk] This is war!
  • Simple as that - they can relisten to the same thing over and over, they can buy a bunch of new streaming music when their playlist gets repetitive, or they can listen to the radio and buy ass-wiping-papers instead. This pretty clearly indicates the entire music industry is worth less than the little square of paper people wipe their asses with.
  • in the US, at least, the AM broadcast band radio waves are full of right wing bullshit, and worldwide the SW broadcast bands are full of religious bullshit which translates to right wing bullshit.

  • by cmdr_klarg ( 629569 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @08:45AM (#59877352)

    Radio doesn't require a subscription, and radios are cheap. Some cell phones have them built in.

  • by EmagGeek ( 574360 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @08:46AM (#59877356) Journal

    There is a psychology behind this. When you're listening to over-the-air radio, you know that there are other people listening to it as well. In a weird way, you feel like you aren't necessarily alone. Radio stations are also doing a lot of call-in programs like they used to do in the 70s-90s. Back then, over the air radio WAS social media.

    Streaming is definitely a more solitary activity with very little, if any, sense of connectedness associated with it.

  • Streaming is OK for background listening, where I just want it to fill in some voids. But when I want to listen to music itself, I want to hear all of the bits, not just 64k per second. Radio just sounds better.
  • What I listen to is rarely found in the terrestrial airwaves, and what is on the terrestrial airwaves, to me, is abject banal garbage. 30% music 70% ads.

    The Sirius channel I keep my thing parked at is Symphony Hall, all the DJs are musicians themselves and quite knowledgable.

    Y'all can have FM. I abandoned it 15 years ago, when my one local classical FM station closed.

    And I abandoned NPR, too.

    I would sell my Mr. Slim am/fm from 1978, but I keep that for when SHTF. IT's quite sensitive, it'll pull stations

  • by eatvegetables ( 914186 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @09:33AM (#59877494)

    Title suggests that the number of people listening to music on radio is increasing, i.e., radio listening is being compared to streaming MUSIC.

    However, the content of the article makes it clear that the actual comparison being made is TALK RADIO vs streaming music. People are simply listening to more news. Talk radio is all news, commentary, and analysis. Music radio is still as dead as it was before zombie apocalypse.

  • So why is it radio still survives in an era of streaming? It's local, live, and requires no computer or smartphone, but is still available to those devices too. In times when people want to be more aware and informed, and know what that means to their own community, radio cannot be beat. It's why the business hasn't died despite the penetration of digital media. People like hearing more about what's news in their communities rather than where media centers are located, and interaction with the audience
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • It was about 3 years ago to the month Norway shut off all its FM radio staions.

    Such shortsightedness, putting all eggs in one basket.

    I'll guess other countries have similar plans.

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