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Music Businesses

Spotify Plans New Premium Tier, Expected To Include HiFi Audio (bloomberg.com) 50

Spotify is planning a more expensive subscription option that's expected to include high-fidelity audio in an effort to drive more revenue and placate investors who've been saying the company should raise its prices. From a report: Dubbed "Supremium" internally, according to people familiar with the strategy, the new tier will be Spotify's most expensive plan and likely offer a HiFi feature the company first announced it was working on in 2021. Spotify delayed that product's rollout after two of its competitors, Apple Music and Amazon Music, began offering the feature for free as part of their standard plans. The new tier will launch this year in non-US markets first.

To augment its current "Premium" tier, Spotify will give subscribers expanded access to audiobooks, either through a specific number of hours free per month or a specific number of titles. There will be an option to purchase more. Currently, the company only sells audiobooks a la carte through its app. Spotify plans to introduce that feature in the US in October, after first launching in markets abroad.

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Spotify Plans New Premium Tier, Expected To Include HiFi Audio

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Buy the 8-track tape and digitize it from your hi-fi to your Gateway computer so the artist can get paid.

    • We have it on good authority that the artists already are being paid: Spotify royalties [theonion.com] My current engagement with the music "industry" is to tip any acoustic busker who shows up outside the local grocery store.
    • Have you been on my wifi again? Ampache, Subsonic, Kodi, Raspberry Pis and a few FLACs. You can even use an ancient browser and Flash on your Gateway if you so desire.
  • Do people really attach hi fidelity stereo systems to devices that run spotify? Can the sound hardware in these devices actually rise to the sound quality of hi fi? There are a lot of places the quality can bottleneck.
    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )

      Do people really attach hi fidelity stereo systems to devices that run spotify? Can the sound hardware in these devices actually rise to the sound quality of hi fi? There are a lot of places the quality can bottleneck.

      I guess if you only search hard enough on the Web, you will find a vendor for plastic audiophile Bluetooth speakers with 5cm chassis that advertises the 9000,-$ product by telling you how the fixed built-in Lithium battery is connected to the PCB using only the finest oxygen-free pure silver cables. I mean, back in the 1980s people might still have known what a decent bass speaker sounds like, but a choice of irrational hardware components was also for sale back then...

    • Do people really attach hi fidelity stereo systems to devices that run spotify?

      My $15000 studio monitors support Spotify Connect. So yes. Yes they do. Virtually every component audio streamer on the market will support a range of systems including Spotify. If buying active speakers isn't your thing maybe you want to get a Rose RS150B Network streamer in your system for the low price of $4995. Bonus points if you spend more money on a high end DAC rendering that $4599 investment into only a box that runs a bit of software.

      Can the sound hardware in these devices actually rise to the sound quality of hi fi?

      Why not? How far must a head be up ones arse to think that a bit

    • Yes! Audio has come insanely far in the past 15 years -- today, for under $100, you can get a line-out that is objectively measured to exceed the limits and accuracy that human hearing can perceive.

      You can have hi-fi audio cheap and easy with headphones, and it's not too expensive with speakers either.

      I used to have a giant collection of FLAC, but Spotify's current bitrates on the Premium tear are transparent to mine and 99% of peoples ears. Lossless is a waste of money and people shouldn't be paying for it

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      I am imagining some 1970s pick up artist asking a girl if she wants to see his new hi fi stereo.
  • I thought he was bringing bazillion of dollars.

    They should file a few more mentally deranged people on their lists of "talk shows". MyPillow guy will love it.

  • Watch for the "regular" subscription tier to have degraded quality, so you'll have a reason to want to pay more for the upgrade.

    • Not really. Audiophiles will buy anything regardless of the fact that most of them couldn't identify an shitty MP3 from any super high res file to save themselves.

      Shit you can just tell people you're streaming high res without changing the quality and they'll still buy it.

    • They'll just do what the radio stations do and compress the living shit out of it so that high-volume sounds like assholes and low-volume sounds like slightly less distorted assholes.

  • by Teppy ( 105859 ) on Tuesday June 20, 2023 @05:54PM (#63619314) Homepage

    How about getting rid of ads on podcasts? Having to listen to ads despite paying for their existing "premium" service is maddening.

    • Don't use Spotify for podcasts.

      Throw the creator money directly in Patreon and get access to their ad-free RSS feed.

      Most of the podcasts that I listen to these days are ad-free using this method.

  • Prepare... (Score:4, Funny)

    by devloop ( 983641 ) on Tuesday June 20, 2023 @06:59PM (#63619526)
    Prepare your vacuum tube phone amps, to expand the soundstage and focus the image, mellow tonality and avoid a sterile harsh HiFi analytic signature.
    Watch out for nano harmonics that might muddy the bass and introduce digital sibilance.
    Only use 4-pin balanced XLR connectors with oxygen free silver cabling.
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  • Nice to see they're catching up to Apple Music, which has offered hifi audio for several years and charges nothing extra for it.

    • In defence of Spotify Apple fucked them over royally by flexing their massive muscles. Spotify announced this first (at least first of the mainstream music providers rather than those targeting specifically audiophiles like Tidal and Qobuz who have always offered it). It was only when Spotify was already in negotiations for the content and it was clear they would charge extra for it that Apple and Amazon jumped in quickly to undercut them.

      But congrats on praising abusive market practices, while also defendi

      • LULz, Spotify pays artist the very least of any streaming provider. So keep praising their abusive market practices. Apple and Amazon didn't screw Spotify. Spotify is just greedy.

        "We announced it, but then the industry changed for a bunch of reasons," Soderstrom told Decoder. "We are going to do it, but we're going to do it in a way where it makes sense for us and for our listeners. The industry changed and we had to adapt."

        In other words, "We have to find a way to make a bunch of money on it and them offer

  • Think you can tell the difference Hi-Fi...doubtful !
    • I definitely cannot unless it is 128bit MP3 or lower. Above that, I really can't tell. Even 128bit is "listenable" for me. Just like watching old TV shows with their shitty (relative) quality is fine.

  • an effort to drive more revenue and placate investors who've been saying the company should raise its prices

    The duty to constantly raise returns for investors is a fucking cancer on business and capitalism. Every company I can think of that has failed or been told to fuck off and die by consumers came to that point after either a massive social blunder, or because investors and C-suite asshats got way too greedy and drove off all their users.

    I like Spotify, and I use it normally, but if they remove features or make me pay more for the same service they're going to get fucking dropped the same way Pandora did

  • This is why I pay for Spotify instead of downloading mp3s.
    I am still trying to figure out if they are doing this effectively.

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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