New music technology With the progress of computer-based technology, how to obtain and create music has become only a few years ago. The whole music catalog can be found on the Internet, some are charged, but most are free. Artists can do studio quality recordings at home and use digital technology to upload them to the internet. As expected, the recording industry had a serious contempt about the advancement of music technology and was only worried about whether it would disturb the company's year-end profits.
White collar work is not the only area of expertise influenced and influenced by new technologies. In the past two years, the music industry has made remarkable progress with the advancement of technology known as a professional tool. With Pro-tools you can digitally record, edit and copy music to a professional sound project. Digital cut and paste technology simplifies the recording process by enabling the audio enhancement (Kelin J. Kuhn) which the old recording engineer refused. Using professional tools, you can turn an aspiring garage musician into the next record chart by increasing the budget of every middle class. But many think that this may be the door to be closed by these newcomers. These techniques create a large part of the talent that these auditory masterpieces are obsolete (Impact Fall)
43 years after gramophone appeared, new technology shocked the music industry again. It's a radio. The radio was invented around 1880, but the first radio station debuted in the United States etc until 1920. Foresightly entrepreneurs found the possibility of wireless technology in disseminating information and immediately acquired a broadcasting license. Again, like gramophones, advanced musicians and music publishers develop them using new technologies and apply them to the more dynamic music industry.
Radio is the greatest source of discovering new music. Several new technologies and devices are opening up new discovery methods, but they also offer new ways for broadcast stations to deliver content, especially new methods via streaming media. 37% of those listening to music said they liked to listen to traditional radio - it was DJ that increased the enjoyment of music (2017 American Music 360 Highlights by Neilson Entertainment). According to the year-end report of the latest Nielsen Entertainment 2017 music in the United States, streaming media continued to grow in 2017, exceeding all forms of music consumption (equivalent to album + track equivalent + on-demand audio stream). Streaming media continued to be the download leader of the mainstream music consumption platform in 2017, and the sales of the music industry as a whole grew by 12.5%. On-demand audio streaming increased by 58.7% compared to 2016