Routenote brings the numbers in - lists the ten largest music streaming services by number of tracks in their catalogue. The undisputable No. 1 is SoundCloud with 200 million songs, Deezer follows with 72 million songs, while the next five - Apple Music, Tidal, Spotify, Amazon, Qobuz - host around 70 million songs each. Napster follows with 60 million, while YouTube Music and KKBOX round up the Top 10 with 50 million songs each.

Inside virtually
September 07, 2020

New Napster owner sees future in VR-gigs

Charlie Worsham

London-based music tech startup MelodyVR, which streams gigs, bought Napster las month for $70m (£52m). Lockdown has proved to be the best thing to have happened to MelodyVR - app installs are up 1,000% since the start of quarantine, month-on-month usage is growing at 36%, and the company has raised almost $30m from investors in recent months, Guardian reports. The company has had 100 artists perform virtual gigs during lockdown, including Emeli Sandé, Liam Payne, The Chainsmokers and Cypress Hill. The gigs can also be watched on virtual reality headsets, an experience that allows fans to choose what part of the auditorium they watch the performance from. MelodyVR charges £9.99 per gig, and it is now adding a monthly subscription option.

Sound & vision
August 25, 2020

MelodyVR buys Napster for $70 million

London-based virtual reality concerts company MelodyVR is buying Napster for the price tag of $70 million, TechCrunch reports. MelodyVR specializes in live virtual reality music experiences, and it plans on combining with Napster to create the "first ever music entertainment platform which combines immersive visual content and music streaming".