YouTube will launch a new subscription music service, the company said on Tuesday after being dragged into a public dispute over royalties that will result in the blockade of some independent artists’ music videos.
The Google Inc-owned video site said in a statement that it is “adding subscription-based features for music on YouTube” and that “hundreds of major label and independent artists” have signed on.
The paid service — to be launched within a few months — will likely allow playback of videos without ads and allow for offline playback on mobile devices. That is according to two people familiar with the matter.
The people also confirmed that a small number of independent artists who had not agreed to new deal terms will have their videos blocked in some countries starting in a few days, even on the free version of YouTube.
YouTube will block the music videos so users of the test version will not be confused about which content they can access for free and which features require payment, the people said. Allowing free streams of music by certain artists while not offering them on the paid service would erode the value of the paid plan, one person said.
The move also adds pressure on those labels to sign, because not being on YouTube altogether will result in less advertising revenue and exposure.
YouTube has reached deals with all three major music labels — Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, and Warner Music Group — and independent labels as a whole representing about 95 percent of all labels, the people said.
Determining which artists are blocked — and where — could be confusing because some indie artists have their music distributed in certain countries by the major labels. Singer Adele, for instance, is signed with Beggars Group’s XL Recordings in the UK, but Sony Music’s Columbia label distributes her music in the US.
Rich Bengloff, president of the American Association of Independent Music, an industry group representing independent labels, said he disagrees with the characterization that only a few labels have not signed. He said that independent artists are being treated unfairly because they lack market power.
“I’m not very happy, obviously,” he said. “We’re asking to be treated equitably and fairly.”
One person familiar with the terms said that independent labels are being offered the same per-stream royalty payment as the major labels, but are not being offered the same guarantees or advances for the first year.
Alison Wenham, chief executive of the Worldwide Independent Network, another trade group, said that YouTube’s decision to blockade some labels was a “grave error of commercial judgment.”
She said services like Spotify and Deezer have done a better job representing independent music on their platforms.
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