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YouTube’s head of music confirms YouTube Red and Google Play Music will merge to create a new service
YouTube’s head of music confirms YouTube Red and Google Play Music will merge to create a new service
YouTube's head of music confirmed that the company is
planning on merging its Google Play Music service with YouTube Red to
create a new streaming offering. During a panel session for the New
Music Seminar conference in New York, Lyor Cohen stated that the company
needed to merge the two services to help educate consumers and bring in
new subscribers.
“The important thing is combining YouTube Red and Google
Play Music, and having one offering,” Cohen said when asked about why
YouTube Red isn’t more popular with music users. He didn’t address
whether or not the two apps would merge — but it seems very unlikely.
Right now, YouTube’s music ecosystem is unnecessarily complicated. There’s YouTube Red,
which removes ads from videos and lets you save them offline, while
also giving you access to Google Play Music for free. Then there’s YouTube Music, which anyone can use but it gets better if you’re signed up for YouTube Red. And YouTube TV is also a thing, an entirely separate thing, but not available everywhere yet.
The merger has been rumored within the industry for months, and recently picked up steam after Google combined the teams working on the two streaming services earlier this year.
In a statement to The Verge, Google said it will
notify users of any changes before they happen. “Music is very
important to Google and we’re evaluating how to bring together our music
offerings to deliver the best possible product for our users, music
partners and artists. Nothing will change for users today and we’ll
provide plenty of notice before any changes are made.”
Cohen also noted that he wanted to collaborate more
directly with the music labels and rights holders. “In my mind, the
missing piece on building these businesses is collaborating with the
[music] industry, and not just making deals and going away and seeing
how it works.” The timeframe for the rebranded service is still unclear,
but given the recent merging of the teams — and the fact that Cohen is
openly talking about it — it may not be much longer before we see what
Google has in store.
In some ways, merging the services won’t be a major
change — paying for a subscription to either YouTube Red or Google Play
Music gives you the other service for free. But in terms of offering a
clear, simple, and compelling offering to consumers, combining the two
makes a lot of sense. So much that you wonder why this hasn’t happened
already.
The article was published on : theverge
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