The Sky Songs beta launches on PC and Mac this month, with TechRadar being treated to a first-look preview of Sky's new subscription-based music streaming and download service.
First impressions? It seriously rocks.
The service is very much based on the Spotify-model of offering instant access to stream or download DRM-free MP3s from a library of over 4,000,000 tunes (and growing).
Firstly, the really interesting news about Sky Songs is the fact that Sky has decided to partner with respected pop music blog Popjustice and the UK's leading online celeb gossip destination Holy Moly! to provide editorial for the site, meaning it's not just a place to get music, but to read about it too.
And while the service will only be available via PC and Mac initially, Sky Song's General Manager Justin Moodie informed us that the editorial features on Sky Songs that provide "useful information on music and artists and so on... is really something different from what other sites are offering."
"It's quite irreverent, quite light-hearted, giving you recommendations of what's going on... and this is obviously on top of the recommendation engine built into the service."
If you wish to stream your music, then tunes play instantly through Sky Song's web-based player – providing of course you are logged-in to your account. Or if you wish to download your MP3s, the service will automatically open up your default media player – iTunes, Windows Media Player and so on.
"The majority of the tunes on there are 320Kbps MP3s," says Moodie. "We've asked for the highest bit-rate the labels can provide."
Easy to play and share
The service also allows you to share your playlists with friends, as well as posting links to your favourite tunes and playlists via all the major social-networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace.
So why the urge to make it a paid-for subscription model and not follow the Spotify model of offering an option of a 'free-to-end-user' streaming and download service funded by advertising?
"It is who Sky are. What we do is we offer subscription services to customers and try to make them easy to use and great value. So we have followed that model from our existing businesses with Sky Songs.

"Also, our rates are very competitive," adds the Sky Songs boss. "On the other side, you can choose to dip in and dip out. You can try out one month's session then choose to leave us for a month or two and then come back if you like. That's fine with us."






Your comments (5) Click to add a new comment
gbaker_lowside
November 30th 2009
5. I’ve got this on a month’s free trial – lucky for me because it is rubbish. It tells me I’ve had my ten free songs which I haven’t, and when I click to download the dowloading software it takes forever and a day before telling me the page I’m looking for doesn’t exist anymore. Thank goodness I didn’t pay for it; and I won’t be going for a subscription when the freebie expires !
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gfdesign
November 26th 2009
4. This has missed the mp3 bandwagon.
Why tie to what is nothing more than a mirror of a mobile phone ploy? Prepaid subscription and more expensive - you 'have' to download your monthly allowance to justify spending in the first place. iTunes has the freedom of pay-as-you-go!
iTunes has TV, movies, 150,000 podcasts, books, University, 90,000 Apps; many free, it makes my Touch secure, easy to edit, update and diagnose, oh, and has millions of DRM free mp3s apparently...
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marky
October 20th 2009
3. Expensive. I would like to see a music subscription service where by you can pay a monthly subscription which will allow you to download unlimited DRM free MP3’s at 320kbs quality. I would pay for that. This service Sky are offering is far too expensive. 99p a track compared to iTunes 69p a track. I am in favour of stopping illegal downloads, but making charges for songs which are far too expensive for subscribers will not stop the problem. A majority of music downloads are by 14 to 30 year olds. My view is if a subscription service is asking for 99p or even 69p for each track, this will just encourage illegal downloading more. Someone take the initiative £15/£20 a month unlimited MP3 DRM free songs.
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rolls63
October 20th 2009
2. I have looked at this but they are missing many major players. Just look at the UK charts, try searching for Michael Buble, or Cheryl Cole (number one) They are not on there, but they are on Spotify.
I like the sound quality on Sky Songs but they need to get their act together with the latest charts before I will part with any money for it. The songs I want are just not on there.
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khsbenny
October 14th 2009
1. Bummer, no Linux support! Any news on if it runs under WINE?
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