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Should We Listen For Music?

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In the years since then we’ve all- adapted and evolved as consumers and corporations must. We are all perpetually available. I now speak for an ‘unlimited’ amount of minutes daily with no surcharge, wherever I may find myself. More likely then not, I (along with the, “44% of us who report using our smartphones to listen to music in a typical week”) might instead be texting while streaming a movie or song or perhaps downloading files to review on the small computer (aka smart phone) I carry around in my pocket. According to Neilson’s annual study of music listeners, “91% of the national population listens to music, spending more than 24 hours each week tuning into their favorite tunes.” (cite)
We listen to music and we continue to listen to a lot of it. While Americans streamed more than 164 billion on-demand tracks across audio and video platforms in 2014, they streamed 135 billion in the first half of 2015 alone – up more than 90% from the same period last year.
The advance of the internet has affected almost every industry and the music business is no exception. When people reference the music business we might first think they are speaking only of record labels. The music business however is a bit more expansive of a definition. “The music industry consists of the companies and individuals that make money by creating and selling live music performances, sound recordings and music videos of songs and instrumental pieces.” (Cite) Over the past decade you may have heard

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