News19,135 Articles

November 28, 2007

UMG launches classical music download site

DRM-free classical tracks in 42 countries

Megan Burger

Universal Music Group (UMG) and its subsidiary Deutsche Grammophon (DG) is set to make the majority of its huge classical music catalogue available online for download. The DG Web Shop launches today.

DG Web Shop allows consumers in 42 countries, including China, India, Latin America, South Africa, and Central and Eastern Europe including Russia, to download music. Individual titles with a playing time of up to seven minutes will be priced as low as €1.29; while regular-length albums will sell for between €10.99 and €11.99.

Almost 2,400 DG albums will be available for download. Tracks will be downloaded in maximum MP3 quality at a transfer bit-rate of 320 kilobits per second (kbps). This audio level exceeds the usual industry download-standard of 128-192 kbps - as well as EMI's 256 kbps on iTunes. All titles will be offered as 320 kbps MP3s without Digital Rights Management (DRM). This means that downloads will be compatible with all portable music players including iPods, iPhones and Walkmans. Tracks will also be burnable to CD with no restriction.

Michael Lang, President of Deutsche Grammophon, stated: "Our company was founded over 110 years ago, and since then, it has stood for innovation and quality.

"During the development of our new web shop, we remained true to these principles as we continue to expand the digital music marketplace with our range of download services."

The DG Web Shop will also sell almost 600 album titles which are no longer available as CDs with, according to UMG at leat, more out-of-print titles to follow. UMG intends to digitise all Deutsche Grammophon recordings to be accessible for download.

Visitors to the web shop have the choice of buying entire albums, collections of albums and box-sets – or individual movements, complete works, and individual pieces. Get the latest internet news at PC Advisor's Broadband Advisor website.

<<newer story | back to index | older story>>

What is this?

Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift

Keep up to date by adding PC Advisor News to your iGoogle home page or Google Reader


Question of the day!

Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?

Question of the day!

Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?

% of PC Advisor readers agree with you

Yes
TBC
No
TBC

What tasks can your smartphone do that would have traditionally been done on a laptop?

119 characters remaining

Follow the conversation at @SmartphoneFocus

web browsing, search facilities, voip, email, word processing everything RT @Graham_D_C

Mainly email but getting better at spreadsheets etc, RT @IDGdan

Google


Recent reviews

Reviews index


Latest reader comments

Latest reader comments


Top news

News index


Latest blog entries

Blogs index


 Our RSS feeds

Sponsored Content

  • Take the internet to new places with the Nokia N800
    Communicate how you want to, where you want to with instant messaging, email and internet calling. View movies, browse the internet wirelessly and watch TV on the high-resolution screen and listen through high-quality stereo speakers with headphone jack.
    Buy now