After years of offering music downloads that are incompatible with iPods, BigPond Music has announced the availability of MP3 downloads from today.
The Grates' new album is available from BigPond Music in MP3 format.
Until now, BigPond Music only offered files in Windows Media Audio (WMA) which is a protected music file incompatible with Apple's iPod player.
"Until now many people found it complex to download music legally, and ended up frustrated when they discovered their music was locked onto a single device or was impossible to transfer to the player of their choice," BigPond group managing director Justin Milne said.
Despite MP3 being the first and most popular compressed music format, the four major music companies have been reluctant to release albums in MP3 as it is free of digital rights management and a feared piracy risk.
"We are the only place in Australia to offer legal downloads in MP3 format from all the major labels," Milne said.
The agreements will see BigPond offer music from record labels Sony BMG, Universal Music, Warner Music, and EMI, as well as Australian independents including MGM, Inertia, Liberation, IODA, and AmpHead.
The company is offering MP3s at the highest bit-rate possible — 320Kbps — which means the quality will be closer to that of the CD than services like eMusic, which typically offer music at variable bit-rates around 200Kbps.
The service offers individual tracks for between AU$0.99 and AU$1.69, while albums are available for AU$16.50. BigPond subscribers receive a discount on albums with a price of AU$15.00.
In comparison, Apple iTunes also offers DRM-free albums in its iTunes Plus format (AAC) for AU$16.99. Representatives from Apple were unavailable for comment.
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Dangerous Dave
13/08/2008 04:51 PM
Wow - this is big. It will be interesting to see what the response from Apple is on this. Maybe the next step is to move away from $1.69 per track (for both Big Pond and iTS)
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bleach1st
13/08/2008 08:51 PM
yeah I agree this is big, I hate Telstra but would be willing to use their services if it was in 320kps mp3 DRM-Free for $0.99/1.69 per song :D
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MrT
13/08/2008 09:08 PM
The author should at least take a look at the site before writing. That way, the author would be able to provide some insight beyond the press release. Some addiiotnal information which might be useful: (1) WMA continues to be offered and appears to be the default (2) There is nothing to indicate the size of the MP3 catalogue. Given WMA appears to be the default and there are many mp3 players which cannot play WMA files, some users might be duped into purchasing files they cannot play on their mp3 players
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Alex
14/08/2008 12:34 AM
MP3 appears to be the default actually (clicking an MP3 album, it shows MP3 first, then 'Look at the WMA version' link). Press release says the big four labels so that should mean every track from them is in mp3 form hopefully.
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