Future Tense DC: How Streaming is Changing Music

Many have hailed online streaming as the music industry’s savior. Streaming revenue surpassed traditional format sales in 2017, and services like Spotify are even making it possible for artists with no mainstream presence or even record label contracts to make a living.

But streaming is also bringing changes that may not be good for the industry, musicians, or listeners. Songs now need to get to the chorus faster to avoid being skipped, albums have more tracks because artists are being paid by the song, and the disparity between pop superstars and everyone else is increasing. Join Future Tense at DC’s Eighteenth Street Lounge for a happy hour conversation about how artists and record labels are adapting to the streaming era, and whether services like Spotify and Apple Music can truly save the music industry.

Future Tense is a partnership of Slate, New America, and Arizona State University.

Participants:

Chris Molanphy, @cmolanphy
Chart analyst and pop critic
Host of the Slate podcast Hit Parade

Cherie Hu, @cheriehu42
Tech columnist for Billboard
Media & entertainment contributor at Forbes

Kevin Erickson, @future_of_music
Director of the Future of Music Coalition

Moderator:

Elahe Izadi, @ElaheIzadi
Pop culture writer for The Washington Post

Follow the conversation online using #FutureofMusic and following @FutureTenseNow.

Eighteenth Street Lounge, 1212 18th St NW, Washington, DC