“The whole issue is a kind of interesting dynamic,” an unnamed senior major-label distribution executive told Billboard. “Amazon is fighting a guerrilla war against iTunes, and now iTunes is getting frustrated because they work hard to set up and promote a release weeks in advance of the street date, and then lo and behold, Amazon jumps in there with this deal of the day and scrapes off some of the cream.”
The Daily Deal was introduced in 2008 as a loss-leader promotion for Amazon’s MP3 store. It was successful enough, however, that the online retailer was able to negotiate exclusivity deals for a day before the “street date” for some major new releases. According to another unnamed source, that eventually began including banner ads and announcements on artist sites at MySpace and other social networking media promoting the Daily Deal.
“When that happened,” the executive said, “iTunes said, ‘Enough of that shit.'”
In response, Apple, whose iTunes Store is the #1 music retailer in the U.S., began declining to promote releases that took part in Amazon’s Daily Deal, which in turn prompted the major labels to begin declining to participate in the Daily Deal.
“They are…diverting their energy from ‘let’s make this machine better’ to ‘let’s protect what we got,'” yet another unnamed source told the magazine.
The labels and Apple have often had a contentious relationship, as Apple has managed iTunes and its business model from the standpoint that Apple Knows Best, while the labels chafe at how much power within the industry Apple has been able to garner by simply building an online music store that people actually wanted to use.