As it was rumored last week, Sony has knelt before the DRM
free trend and joined the music revolution by selling MP3s and digital albums.
But the bad news is that instead of choosing iTunes Music store or at least
Amazon MP3 (the biggest collection of DRM Free tracks), Sony prefers to do
things in its unique, complicated way.
According to a press statement released today by the
company, the MP3s without DRM protection will be sold through a new website,
MusicPass.com. Don’t rush to download your favorite music, because the address
contains only a page with a press release.
MusicPass will debut on January 15, with 37 titles varying
from Rock and Pop to R&B and Country style. Nothing unusual so far, but
here comes the bad news.
The customers who wish to download the high-quality MP3
files will have to first buy Platinum
MultiPass card. As Sony
announced, the cards will be priced at a suggested list retail price of $12.99
which will include the complete digital album plus bonus material or, in the
case of compilations, extensive track listings.
Two of the albums included in the initial offering - Celine
Dion's Taking Chances and Kenny Chesney's Just Who I Am: Poets & Pirates -
will be made available both as regularly priced Platinum MusicPass Cards, and
in special slrp $19.99 versions through which consumers will receive the
complete album and bonus material, plus the choice of one additional album from
that same artist's rich catalog of recordings.
In order to get the content from their MusicPass cards,
consumers scratch the back of their card to unveil their pin number, based on
which they will download from MusicPass.com their music files and/or bonus
material.
Say what? In order to get the music I should first pay a
visit to a retail store such as Best Buy, Target, and Fred's, then come home to
scratch the back and log on the website to download the music? Hey, Sony, wake
up! It’s 2008, not 1998.
On the other hand why should I pay $12.99 for a card, when a
CD is somewhere between $14 and $16 and I can download a digital album for
close to $9?
Maybe the Platinum
Music Pass
is a great idea for a gift cards and “great collectibles”, but if Sony will
insist to rely only on this method to sell its DRM free music, then I foresee a
short and painful future for MusicPass.com. Let’s hope that Sony will realize
soon how complicated its method is and change its mind.
Anyway, let’s see what else Sony said about its latest idea.
The MP3 files delivered through MusicPass play on computers, as well as on all
MP3 players, including iPods. Until the end of January, the Platinum Multi
Pass cards will be
available at the Trans World (Coconuts, FYE, Wherehouse, & Spec's) and
Winn-Dixie stores.
For the moment, Sony will roll out the service in US and Canada, where participating
retailers include Best Buy, CD Plus, Future Shop, Shoppers Drug Mart and
Wal-Mart. In addition, HMV will launch MusicPass in Canada during the first calendar
quarter of 2008.
According to some reports, a Sony BMG official in Tokyo said that for the moment MusicPass.com will be
available only in US and Canada.
Below you can check the complete list of the first 37 albums
that will be available on launch. Good luck, Sony!
Alejandro Fernandez, Viento A Favor
Alicia Keys, As I Am
Avril Lavigne, The Best Damn Thing
Backstreet Boys, UnBreakable
Barry Manilow, The Greatest Songs of the Seventies
Bob Dylan, Dylan
Boys Like Girls, Boys Like Girls
Brad Paisley, 5th Gear
Britney Spears, Blackout
Brooks & Dunn, Cowboy Town
Bruce Springsteen, Magic
Calle 13, Residente o Visitante
Camila, Todo Cambio
Carrie Underwood, Carnival Ride
Casting Crowns, The Altar and The Door
Celine Dion, Taking Chances
Chris Brown, Exclusive
Daughtry, Daughtry
Elvis Presley, Elvis 30 #1 Hits
Jennifer Lopez, Brave
John Mayer, Continuum
Kenny Chesney, Just Who I Am: Poets & Pirates
Martina McBride, Waking Up Laughing
P!nk, I'm Not Dead
Santana, Ultimate Santana
Sara Bareilles, Little Voice
Sean Kingston, Sean Kingston
The Fray, How To Save A Life
Three Days Grace, One-X
Tony Bennett, Duets