You can make Spotify and Pandora your default music services. They're just the start.
"Alexa, play the new Taylor Swift!"
Streaming is king though, bringing in 75 percent of the US recording industry's revenue.
Vevo's not quite dead yet as Alan Price takes the reins.
From now on, you'll probably only know Vevo as a watermark on YouTube music videos. (If that's not the case already...)
A number of popular videos disappeared or were defaced temporarily on Tuesday due to a security breach.
Explosive popularity of streaming memberships has lifted US music to where sales were a decade ago (even if they're still 40 percent below their peak).
Three terabytes of office documents, videos and promotional materials pilfered from the online music video service were posted online, Gizmodo reports.
For first time, more than half of US record sales came from streaming on services like Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube in 2016.
The company is trying to reimagine itself as a nerve center for music video culture, overhauling its app (again) to give its identity more edge.
Australians are spending more than ever on streaming according to new sales figures. But while the recording industry is praising the rise of digital music, streaming can't staunch the heavy losses seen in the past 15 years.
After six months at the helm of the Internet's biggest library of top music videos, Erik Huggers wants to show off the new Vevo. That begins with a revamped app.