Last.fm World Wide Web jukebox offer songs of your choice free to listen
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Music website Last.fm on Wednesday launched an ad-based online service that lets society listen for free to songs of their choosing. The ability to dip into a uniquely broad catalogue from your laptop, home or office computer, and listen to whatever you want for free represents a new way of consuming music. Last.fm, which was bought in May of last year by US entertainment powerhouse CBS Corp., offers the service in the United States, United Kingdom, and Germany and promised to roll it out globally in coming months. Last.fm limits to three the number of times any listener can play a specific song, referring them on the fourth try to iTunes, Amazon or another online music
Last.fm plus announced an “artist royalty” deal for musicians with no record label ties. Unsigned artists can upload their songs to Last.fm, which will pay them each duration someone listens to their music. Last.fm is building a platform to help redesign the music economy, enabling artists and labels to earn revenue according to how folks listen, rather than how they buy. Last.fm is used by more than 20 million society monthly from 240 countries.
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