Who Will Define the Digital Album?

Gatefold LPs and CDs with copious booklets seduced past generations of listeners with form factors that made them want to buy longform music--and settle down for long, pleasurable evenings playing it. While these formats are not exactly dead, a struggle has broken out over what kind of longform digital music album will succeed them in the age of downloads.

At the center of the struggle is, not surprisingly, Apple. The maker of iThings is working with the major labels to develop a digital album format, code-named Cocktail, that would combine photos, lyric sheets, and liner notes in an interactive format that would enable users to click songs. "It's not just a bunch of PDFs," an Apple exec told the Financial Times (free read with registration).

But even as they cooperate with Apple on developing the digital album, the major labels have plans for a version of their own, reports news.com. In fact, they initiated their project before Apple got started on Cocktail, so the latter has understandably raised some hackles. But it still makes sense for the labels to pursue their own vision of the digital album because iTunes is not the only online store in the universe. The labels need a digital album format to offer Amazon and numerous other online retailers.

Cocktail and its non-Apple shadows are responses to the increasing tendency of online music purchasers to buy single tracks rather than entire albums. This has turned music retailing on its head. The labels long for a return to the time when consumers routinely plunked down their hard earned money for entire albums. Whether either of these prospective digital album formats will successfully buck the trend remains to be seen.

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