paidContent.org - The Economics of Content

Current Story

NPR Launches Its Ambitious Music Site

By Rafat Ali - Mon 05 Nov 2007 10:56 AM PST

NPR has launched its rather ambitious music site, after a long time in development: NPR Music is being launched along with 12 member stations, and will have on-air and online content gathered from NPR and the participating stations as well as original content, including interviews, reviews, blogs and live performances. The site covers all the music genres that are found on public radio, including Rock, Folk, Jazz, World and Classical, reports FMQB. Additional stations and producers will join in the coming months.

Also launching is a new NPR media player, which allows users to create a playlist for video and audio (dating from May 2005 to present) on the site and makes recommendations for related content depending on a user’s selections. Lots more details here and in FAQs here.

Posted in: Entertainment, Music

Tags: npr music, npr,

Check our our new Social Media Deals Report, which examines the categories, number and size of VC and M&A deals into social media

Related Research from Alacrastore.com

6 Responses:
  • From Rossum Higgins Mon 05 Nov 2007 08:03 PM

    Yech! Another proprietary player? That’s a big thumbs-down from me.

    I did check out the site, and some of the content certainly seems promising, though.

  • From Ubu Walker Tue 06 Nov 2007 09:30 AM

    @Rossum
    Well, at least the player is flash based, which means that it can be played on linux, right?

  • From algebra Mon 10 Dec 2007 11:13 PM

    NPR’s new NPR Media Player SUCKS TO THE MAX!!!

    Previously, users had the choice of either Real Player OR Windows Media Player, AND ALSO of launching either of those two players in “Stand-Alone Mode”—all of which worked very well with dial-up, 56-k modem connections!

    By COMPLETELY ELIMINATING those former options and unilaterally substituting their new “NPR Media Player”, participating NPR programs have, at one fell swoop, RENDERED ALL OF THEIR AUDIO FILES AND ARCHIVES COMPLETELY INACCESSIBLE TO USERS WITH 56k DIALK-UP MODEM CONNECTIONS!!!

    (All you now get are split-second sound-bites, “punctuated"(sic) by long, (multi-minute!) periods of “buffering”—or rather long stretches of buffering, punctuated every few minutes by a split-second of audio.)

  • From slightlynew Sat 05 Jan 2008 10:09 AM

    NRP Player sucks. An awful, clunky, unusable interface. They took a huge step backward forcing this proprietary crap on their audience, and I’m listening to a lot less NPR because of it. Why don’t they go ahead and make their own radios as well?

  • From Max Exter Tue 29 Jan 2008 10:36 AM

    I actually think that it is a big improvement.  Having an online player that can remember what I was last listening to is much better than their previous effort using two extremely crappy formats.  And further, most of their current catalog is available in MP3 now. 

    It needs a lot of work, and a Firefox extension would be nice, but it’s a huge improvement.

  • From Mateo Sun 02 Mar 2008 06:31 AM

    I live overseas and the only way for me to listen to NPR is online. As Algebra mentioned above, the previous player choices worked fine. Now my only option is to use their new inferior player. It spends more time buffering than it does playing. Often it will get stuck in buffer-mode and never resume playing. Now it pisses me off and I therefore spend less time listening to NPR. A shame, really.

Post Your Comment

Mobile Options

» Mobile App
» Mobile/WAP Site

Send a News Tip

About

paidContent.org, flagship of the ContentNext Media network, provides global coverage of the business of digital content.

Rafat Ali
Publisher & Co-Editor

Staci D. Kramer
Co-Editor

David Kaplan
Senior Correspondent

Joseph Weisenthal
Correspondent

Robert Andrews
U.K. Editor

Amanda Natividad
Editorial Producer

EconCeleb Conference - The Economics of Celebrity. July 23 at the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood

Featured Report - 2008 Social Media Deals Report

front page of report

The economics of social media continue to heat up, with ever more buzz created in new and growing market categories. This report examines the categories, number and size of investment and acquisitions into social media and the resulting value created from 2007 through 2008. Order your report today to analyze deals made by Yahoo, Disney, Google, AOL, CBS, Hearst, Microsoft and many more.

Learn more or purchase now.

New Media/Interactive Job Listings

Post Job
More Jobs

Generous Supporters