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Napster signs European indie giant

Europe's largest independent record company, edel, has signed with Napster and Bertelsmann to allow its music to be traded through Napster's fee-based service.

John Geralds in Silicon Valley, vnunet.com 03 Jan 2001
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Europe's largest independent record company, edel, has signed with Napster and Bertelsmann to allow its music to be traded through Napster's fee-based service.

Germany's edel will allow Napster to redistribute its catalogue, which includes rap group Pharcyde and dance singer Blumchen, and to promote some of its artists on its existing free service. The label has also pledged to help recruit other record companies for Napster.

In addition, selected edel artists will be promoted through Napster's Feature Music Programme, which helps the Napster user community discover new music and artists. The programme begins next month.

Michael Haentjes, chief executive at edel, said: "This is a very logical step for a company like ours. We have embraced the internet and welcome Napster's commitment to protect the interests of artists, songwriters and other rights holders through their new business model."

He added that the company will support any activity that provides fair compensation for everyone involved. "This agreement makes clear that edel is at the forefront of new technologies and innovative marketing," he said. The agreement between edel and Napster takes effect immediately.

The alliance follows Napster's October deal with Bertelsmann, in which both companies agreed to maintain some version of Napster's current file-swapping service while adding a fee-based membership component that would allow some compensation for artists and record labels. In a move that might deter some of Napster's 38 million users, the music download company said it would begin imposing a charge of about $4.95 per month for access to legal MP3 files.

Bertlesmann's record label, BMG, which was one of the major US record companies that sued Napster for alleged copyright infringement, has agreed to withdraw its lawsuit once the subscription service is up and running. Edel is the second record company to sign to Napster following BMG.

See also:

Internet-based music file-swapping service Napster has agreed its first deal to pay royalties to artists.  27 Jun 2001
Napster has provisionally agreed a licensing deal with three of the world's biggest record labels, possibly salvaging its controversial business model, but users may well be unimpressed.  14 Jun 2001
NapsterNapster, the website, was built as a central host for users wishing to swap MP3 music files. It has sparked an almighty legal battle over its legitamacy and has changed the way people obtain music.  01 May 2001
Napster hanging by a legal threadNapster must halt the trading of copyrighted songs on its site, although it will be allowed to stay in operation until a US court modifies an injunction against the company.  13 Feb 2001
napsterThe immediate fate of Napster will be revealed on Monday evening UK time when a US court announces its decision on whether the online music file-sharing community should be effectively shut down.  12 Feb 2001
German media giant Bertelsmann has said that from this summer it will charge a membership fee to users of Napster, the music swap service website.  29 Jan 2001
IBM, Ericsson and Tornado have all unveiled separate initiatives designed to boost the authorised distribution of music online.  22 Jan 2001
Small Cakewalk PyroCreate your own digital music files and burn them to CD, all in one convenient package.  15 Jan 2001
Napster users make fewer music purchases the more they download music online, according to a study released on the same day that the file swapping site agreed a new business model with German giant, Bertelsmann.  01 Nov 2000
Updated: Napster, the darling of the internet underground, plans to begin charging users for its service under a subscription-based model in partnership with German entertainment giant Bertelsmann.  01 Nov 2000
The music industry has been shaken up by the emergence of MP3-based music websites such as Napster. Critics accuse them of facilitating piracy while advocates say they make it easier for unsigned musicians to have their music heard. We look at what all the fuss is about.  08 Aug 2000

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