• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 6, Saturday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

What Is “the Streaming Paradox?” New Study Explores the Labor of Music

Story Center by Story Center
April 14, 2026
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
What Is "the Streaming Paradox?" New Study Explores the Labor of Music

RELATED POSTS

New Music Friday: The best new music from Vince Staples & more

Skrillex Marks a Bold New Chapter With ‘SOMA’ Album — Review

Corella release new music video for ‘Bitter End’

A new report published by the Oxford Internet Institute paints a stark picture of what it means to be a working musician in 2026: platforms like Spotify and social media are now essential to building a career — but they’re not built to sustain one.

Titled “Musicians at Work in the Platform and AI Era,” the study surveyed more than 1,200 artists across the unique, rising music markets of Brazil, Chile, the Netherlands, Nigeria, and South Korea.

Its core finding is what researchers call “the streaming paradox” — a system where musicians depend on digital platforms for visibility, even as those same platforms fail to deliver meaningful income.

Most musicians aren’t making a living from music

The numbers reinforce what many artists already feel:

  • 77% of musicians earn less than €10,000 annually from music
  • 83% are dissatisfied with streaming royalties

For so many artists, the streaming era has expanded access and global reach, but not financial stability. For most working independent artists, music income remains fragmented, unpredictable, and often insufficient.

+Read more: “New Data Reveals That Streaming Is 70% of Total Recorded Music Revenue”

ADVERTISEMENT

The job has changed — and not in a creative way

Perhaps the most telling shift is how musicians spend their time. The report also finds that:

  • Nearly a quarter of artists spend more than half their working hours on non-music tasks related to their music efforts.
  • 69% say they are spending more time on online promotion than in previous years.

Being a musician today increasingly means being a full-time content creator, marketer, and community manager all in one — often without additional compensation for that labor.

Who benefits from streaming depends on where you are

One of the study’s more surprising findings is how uneven the streaming economy is globally.

  • 83% of Nigerian musicians say streaming has improved their careers
  • But just 14% of Dutch musicians say the same

That gap suggests streaming’s impact isn’t universal — it depends heavily on local infrastructure, audience behavior, and economic context. In emerging markets, platforms may unlock access. In more mature markets, they may simply reinforce existing inequalities.

Emerging artists depend on streaming the most — even when it pays the least

Another key insight: the artists earning the least are often the ones who rely on streaming the most.

Lower-income musicians are significantly more likely to view platforms as essential to their careers, while higher-earning artists are more likely to treat them as just one tool among many — alongside touring, licensing, and direct fan monetization.

It’s a dynamic that reinforces a difficult reality: the artists who need platforms the most are often the ones getting the least out of them financially.

AI isn’t widely used yet — but concerns are rising fast

Despite constant industry buzz, the report finds that 89% of musicians are not using AI tools in their fan interactions. But that doesn’t mean they’re unconcerned.

Many artists — particularly in Europe (according to this report) — expressed anxiety about AI-generated music flooding streaming platforms, increasing competition and making it even harder to stand out in an already saturated ecosystem.

+Read more: “Why I Built a Music Discovery Platform That Finds, Not Buries, Niche Artists”

So what about us indie artists?

For independent artists, the report validates an existing problem we’ve all known for some time. The modern music career is no longer just about making music, it’s about navigating a system where:

  • Visibility is controlled solely by platforms
  • Income is fragmented across multiple sources
  • Time is increasingly spent on promotion over creation, making the competitive edge of music-making not about music.
  • And on that note, competition is expanding — including from AI-generated content

But the takeaway isn’t that platforms are useless. It’s that they’re incomplete. Streaming can still drive discovery. Social media can still build audiences. But neither, on their own, are reliable foundations for a sustainable career.

The most resilient artists are already adapting — building direct fan relationships, diversifying revenue streams, and treating platforms as entry points, not endpoints.

Because in the platform era, success is about finding ways to get paid — even when the system isn’t designed for it.

Read the full report by the Oxford Internet Institute here.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.hypebot.com ’

Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

New Music Friday: The best new music from Vince Staples & more
Music

New Music Friday: The best new music from Vince Staples & more

June 6, 2026
Skrillex
Music

Skrillex Marks a Bold New Chapter With ‘SOMA’ Album — Review

June 6, 2026
A Beautiful World To Lose - Corella
Music

Corella release new music video for ‘Bitter End’

June 6, 2026
Trump Posts Song About Himself, AI Music Video
Music

Trump Posts Song About Himself, AI Music Video

June 6, 2026
Jeff Vetsch, center, and Todd Anderson, left, and Dempsey Schroeder, right, members of Jeff Vetsch and Friends, perform as part of New London's fifth annual "Porchfest" on Saturday, June 7, 2025.
Music

Summer Fun: Live music showcased at events and city festivals in 2026 – West Central Tribune

June 6, 2026
A divider for Metal Hammer
Music

Metal Hammer’s tracks of the week: June 5 2026

June 6, 2026
Next Post
Gap hires Chief Entertainment Officer, signaling a shift in fashion marketing

Industry KPIs: Utility-driven apps outperform entertainment on day 30 engagement

Hollywood's latest power grab: Why theater owners are fighting back

Hollywood's latest power grab: Why theater owners are fighting back

Recommended Stories

Slow Low Low Low #dance #music #dancer #song #love ❤❤#jason #jasonderulo

Slow Low Low Low #dance #music #dancer #song #love ❤❤#jason #jasonderulo

January 10, 2026
Jammy Buffet

Iowa State Fair | Jammy Buffet

April 28, 2026
Cybill Shepherd at 'The Comedy Central Roast of Bruce Willis'

Cybill Shepherd Spills Details About Steamy Love Affair With Elvis Presley

October 21, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

#Celebrity History #trivia #triviagame #triviatime… #Shorts #globalstudiio

#Celebrity History #trivia #triviagame #triviatime… #Shorts #globalstudiio

June 6, 2026
New Music Friday: The best new music from Vince Staples & more

New Music Friday: The best new music from Vince Staples & more

June 6, 2026
Two images side by side: left shows Sauce Walka with a child, right shows a woman in a car. Text overlays the images.

Sauce Walka’s Baby Mother Leaks Alleged Audio of Rapper Making Threats

June 6, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land