Instead of burdening you with long term contracts and hidden fees, SongCast makes sure that you can focus entirely on music distribution and get your song on iTunes. While other companies might only be interested in their own success, if you sign up with SongCast, we promise that our services will not only provide you with helpful guidance, but will also allow you to sell your music online knowing that the entire music distribution process is being covered from A to Z.
If you have ever wondered how to get your song on iTunes and all other major music distribution services or how to promote your music online, there is no need to continue your search.
SongCast makes music distribution easy, with a step-by-step process that any artist can master. Stop hesitating and wondering - setup your account today and start submitting your albums to the world's most popular online music services. Before you know it, you can sell your music online and begin collecting royalties along with thousands of other artists and labels that use SongCast each and every day!
Toggle navigation. Collect Your Royalties After you have learned how to get your music on iTunes and your fans have begun to download your songs, you will begin to collect royalties. We believe in the value of music and paying creators fairly for their work. Since we launched the iTunes Store in , we have helped millions of artists and songwriters make a living from music. As the discussion about streaming royalties continues, we believe it is important to share our values.
We believe in paying every creator the same rate, that a play has a value, and that creators should never have to pay for featuring.
While other services pay some independent labels a substantially lower rate than they pay major labels, we pay the same headline rate to all labels. Artists will be making a lot more money in aggregate from Spotify, and if Beats' user numbers grow, its per-stream payouts will come down. So this graphic isn't proof that one service is better for artists than another, in that sense.
Information is Beautiful has included a metric of "users per play needed" — the little dots at the bottom right of each circle — to reflect this. Even so, it's a great conversation-starter. The full infographic is embedded below, while McCandless' other recent work can be found in his Knowledge is Beautiful book. Some important caveats: these numbers apply to performing musicians, but they do not include publishing royalties for the songwriting. Plus, the most important factor in how much an artist signed to a label earns is the terms of their contract: some have good, fair deals.
Averaging that out is also the reason why the figures here may not match those announced by the streaming services. Finally, the per-play figures for streaming service can be misleading, as they depend on how many or few users the service has. Beats may pay more per-stream than Spotify, but that's because it has relatively few users.
Artists will be making a lot more money in aggregate from Spotify, and if Beats' user numbers grow, its per-stream payouts will come down. So this graphic isn't proof that one service is better for artists than another, in that sense. Information is Beautiful has included a metric of "users per play needed" — the little dots at the bottom right of each circle — to reflect this.
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