Beatles music joins streaming services By Leo Kelion

Technology desk editor Published duration 23 December 2015

image caption The Beatles' music is being made available to stream on a range of services

The Beatles' music is being made available on a wide range of streaming music services.

Spotify, Apple Music, Google Play, Tidal and Amazon Prime Music are among nine services that will offer the band's tracks worldwide.

The group split up in April 1970. However, their songs - including Hey Jude and Yesterday - remain hugely popular and influential.

One expert suggested that the move would help their legacy endure.

"In terms of digital the Beatles have always been quite late to the party - they came to iTunes in 2010, which was a good five years after the iTunes Music Store started gaining momentum," said Chris Cooke, co-founder of the music industry news site CMU.

"We had expected they would probably do an exclusive deal to stream their music with one service, but it looks like instead they are going to be pretty much everywhere from day one.

"So, I suppose that is them accepting that streaming is now a very serious, significant part of the record industry."

Other services that have secured the band's catalogue include Deezer, Microsoft Groove, Napster and Slacker Radio.

The deal involves rights to stream 224 songs from the original 13 studio albums released in the UK as well as "essential" collections including Past Masters.

The tracks will be made available from 24 December.

'Lucrative catalogue'

John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr clocked up 17 number one singles in the British charts as the Beatles.

image copyright Apple image caption The Beatles' albums have been rereleased several times

But long after the band broke up they continued to issue songs and compilations, the most recent of which was an expanded edition of Beatles 1 put on sale last month.

"There's a really simply reason why the Beatles catalogue took so long to join streaming services - their publishers didn't want to do anything to damage potential sales of reissues and retrospectives - it's a very lucrative catalogue," said Mark Mulligan from the media research firm Midia.

"But they've waited until the market has got some scale and they could get the best deal.

"It's a big PR catch as it helps communicate that the platforms are 'all the music in the world' - which is the value proposition of streaming services."

Analysis - Mark Savage, BBC Music reporter

It's a White (Album) Christmas. Some of the most enduring hits in pop are coming to a streaming service near you.

The Beatles as a corporate entity have been notoriously slow in adapting to new technology. They waited five years to issue their albums on CD, and didn't talk about the download Revolution until 2010 - seven years after the iTunes store launched.

Their arrival on streaming services comes as consumption on those platforms starts to overtake digital downloads as a source of income for the music industry. The number of songs streamed in the UK looks set to top 25 billion this year, up from 13.7 billion in 2014, according to the Official Charts Company.

It will be interesting to see how the band's music competes against the likes of Justin Bieber - whose latest singles are being streamed almost six million times a week, exerting a firm grip on the top of the charts.

When The Beatles became available to buy on iTunes, the band scored 10 entries into the Top 100 - but the top-selling song (Hey Jude) only reached number 40.

The Beatles announcement comes as a number of high-profile artists - including Neil Young, Prince and Radiohead's Thom Yorke - have questioned the value of streaming services.

The most prominent example is Adele.

Her new album, 25, has sold more than seven million copies without appearing on any streaming platform, although she has made her single Hello available.

image caption Beatles songs include Let It Be, Come Together, All You Need is Love and A Hard Day's Night

"I believe music should be an event," she told Time magazine earlier this week.

"I don't use streaming. I buy my music. I download it, and I buy a physical [copy] just to make up for the fact that someone else somewhere isn't.

"It's a bit disposable, streaming."