Pandora is blowing music consumption off the grid. Myriad digital choices are sending audio junkies into sensory overloadmusic wants to be everywhere.
Social Rocks.
Bloodred Erik Unedited by Luminis Kanto on Flickr
The Delicious user base has a relatively high concentration of developers, designers, techies, nerds, etc.—individuals likely to have above-average internet savvy. As a group they are an acute filter for quality content. The chart below shows the popularity of the same music websites based on data from Delicious. You can see there is some divergence from the traffic heat map. The most notable difference is MySpace Music, which showed the highest website traffic, but shows the lowest Delicious rank. Pandora is the top-bookmarked music site on Delicious by far, with last.fm second, and Grooveshark climbing quickly. Pandora is also the top-ranked music site on Xmarks.
Musicians—many are at the center of the social mix lifecasting on Twitter, Ustream, YouTube, Facebook, and MySpace. They’re communicating like never before, and evolving the industry. Revenue comes in new forms. The urge to be “indie” is contagious. The amplifiers are on.
Mobility Rolls.
Top Free iPhone Music Apps
- Pandora Radio
- Shazam
- Virtuoso Piano Free
- Rhapsody
- iheart radio
- Sirius XM Premium Online
- LYRICS
- Slacker Radio
- Drum Kit Lite
- AOL Radio
- gigzee
- Last.fm
Techcrunch reports Pandora registers 600k new users/week and half of them come from mobile devices. GigaOM reports Pandora is driving towards car radio integration.

Seven of the top twelve are radio/streaming apps. But smartphones are not just for listening to music. Gigzee is an events app—a location-aware tool for finding shows/concerts in your area. With more people on smartphones, more people can take advantage of location-based services like this. Music creation apps like Virtuoso Piano, Drum Kit, freestyle, NLog Synth, Digidrummer, Looptastic, and Jamble Music Mashups are wildly popular. Every human is an artist in some way—as technology improves more people will find themselves creating, and collaborating remotely. Who’s at center stage now? Creative Commons-released music encourages open remixing via sites like JamGlue, ccMixter, Indaba Music, Jamendo, SoundCloud, and more. Maybe influenced by NIN, many musicians are releasing audio source files for open remixing, fan remix contests, remix apps, or fan music videos.
Music Gaming
Music games are going mobile fast—especially rhythm games. Rock Band came to the iPhone, as did DanceDanceRevolution, Hip Hop All Star, new versions of Guitar Rock Tour, and TapTapRevenge.
Reuters reports that Tap Tap Revenge has now been installed 20+ million times. New games releases in 2009 included The Beatles Rock Band and DJ Hero, but neither have mobile apps, yet. Harmonix rolled out Rock Band Network—an platform that will let indie musicians get their music in the game. Better mobile graphics are coming—it’s only a matter of time before we see mobile apps that let players interact with music in virtual worlds like Second Life or with real-life live concert streams. And this trailer for Guitar Rock Tour 2…well…you get the idea—Happy New Year. Rock on!


