Tag: music

  • Sony YAY! taps the power of music for kids

    New Delhi: The power of music can play an instrumental role in kids’ life by instilling hope and inspiring a positive outlook in them. With this objective in mind, the kids’ entertainment channel Sony YAY! has decided to bring children closer to the power of music on this World Music Day.

    The channel has joined hands with leading musicians of the country like Rekha Bhardwaj, Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, Vishal Dadlani, Shaan, and Suneeta Rao who have donated their autographed musical instruments for kids who otherwise might not have the privilege of its access.

    Sony Pictures Networks India, Kids’ Genre, business head, Leena Lele Dutta said, “It’s been a tough year for kids. Music has always gone beyond the boundaries of entertainment to be relaxing and healing thus aiding and empowering kids to overcome any challenges. Our initiative for world music day recognises the need to reinforce the importance of celebrating music amongst kids. I thank each one of the musical heroes for participating and inspiring hope and positivity in the lives of kids.”

    Forces of the Indian music industry like Rekha Bhardwaj who gave us tunes like Sasural Genda Phool has donated her Digital Ragini for this initiative. The coolest sonic trio of the Hindi film industry Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy autographed a Ukulele, Clap Box, and Guitar respectively. Known for his epic romantic tunes and velvety voice, singer Shaan signed a Mandolin for the kids. Lastly, since the 90s fever is trending, the melody queen of the era, Suneeta Rao has also shown her support by signing a Bongo Drum.

    Singer Shaan emphasized the importance of music in his life. “It has taught me patience and hard work and this World Music Day, I hope that children across the world learn the importance of perseverance and adopt the value of hard work. Through this initiative by Sony YAY!, I hope we bring inspiration in the lives of these kids,” he said.

    Talking about the initiative, musician Shankar Mahadeva said, “It’s a difficult time for everyone as we all have been spending time at home in isolation. Having ample time at our disposal as we stay indoors, we must put some aside to celebrate a wonderful thing called music. For it is something that can be your friend, philosopher, guide, it can just be with you. So, on World Music Day, create, innovate, introspect and see what kind of talent you have and how much can you nurture it. I am extremely thankful to Sony YAY! and their entire team for helping us embark on this beautiful journey of music together.”

  • IPRS launches #KNOWYOURMUSIC campaign ahead of World Music Day

    New Delhi: The Indian Performing Right Society Limited (IPRS) and Dolby Laboratories have come together ahead of the World Music Day on 21 June, to launch the #KNOWYOURMUSIC campaign highlighting multiple genres of Indian music and creating a more engaged audience.

    The launch will commence with a panel discussion on 21 June at 5 pm with eminent personalities from the music industry including Turnkey Music & Publishing Pvt Ltd, managing director, Atul Churamani, music composer Shantanu Moitra, Veena Music Pvt Ltd, director, Hemjit Maloo, popular Indian folk musician Abha Hanjura and Anahad Foundation, founder-director, Abhinav Agarwal. The session will be moderated by lyricist, screenwriter and actor Mayur Puri.

    Anahad Foundation, an NGO that works for the recognition, preservation, and evolution of Indian Folk Music has also come on board and as part of the initiative and IPRS will enrol over 100 folk artists, who are authors and composers as its member.

    IPRS chairman, Javed Akhtar said the #KNOWYOURMUSIC campaign was launched to unfold India’s rich musical heritage and create a forum to initiate engagement with music. “Enriched over millennia, Indian music has always stood out by its vast cultural diversity. Music styles like Folk, Ghazal, Devotional, Instrumental, etc. have been presented by the music creators in unison to celebrate life, love, joy, loss, and the human condition. However, a vast number of today’s audiences have limited exposure and knowledge of these styles of music and their creators. It is time we purposefully indulge in music and help to build a community of a more engaged audience, thus fuelling a flourishing future for music and its creators,” said the noted lyricist.

    IPRS CEO Rakesh Nigam said with this campaign, IPRS aims to initiate a transformation in the way people are consuming music, thus making music just not a passive consumption habit but a work of art and creation that the audience would take notice of and love to engage with. “Through the wide-ranging performances and sessions every month, IPRS looks forward to educating the audience on different styles of songs and music and the stories behind their creation. The more the audiences know about the music they are listening to, the more informed decisions they will make,” he added.

    One can register here to watch the panel discussion : link- https://bit.ly/2TDPrrN.

  • Tata Sky unveils its newly revamped music service, Tata Sky Music

    New Delhi: Aligned with its new brand purpose to make tomorrow better than today for its subscribers, content distribution, and Pay TV platform Tata Sky on Thursday unveiled its revamped music service offering, Tata Sky Music.

    The platform has integrated the strengths of the two earlier portfolios, Tata Sky Music and Tata Sky Music+ at an affordable price.  With 20 Audio Stations and five Video Stations, Tata Sky Music plans to bring together a robust offering of mass, niche, Indian, International, Regional, Devotional, Ghazal, Hindustani, Carnatic music among many other genres. The service will be available on TV as well as with Mobile App at Rs 2.5 per day, it said in a release.

    Commenting on the offering, Tata Sky chief commercial and content officer, Pallavi Puri, said, “We wanted to offer a one-stop music service with added benefits. With a robust, and curated library for all genres of music, a refreshed Tata Sky Music will give subscribers an elevated music experience. With the help of our partner, Hungama Music, this is a step towards expanding the audience base, and exploring many new cohorts of customers.”

    Offering audio and video on one unified platform, Tata Sky Music offers a 360-degree affordable family plan for all music lovers that can be enjoyed anytime anywhere with access on both television and the Tata Sky Mobile App. Active subscribers of the service will continue to enjoy the free Hungama Music Pro subscription plan worth Rs 99 per month, through the Tata Sky Mobile app at no additional cost.

    Active subscribers of the Tata Sky Music & Music+ service will be upgraded to this pack automatically. New subscribers can give a missed call on 080 6858 0815 to enjoy the service on 815.

  • Gaana celebrates classical music with ‘Unwind with Taj’

    Gaana celebrates classical music with ‘Unwind with Taj’

    Mumbai: Audio streaming app Gaana has unveiled ‘Unwind with Taj’ to bring alive the magic of Indian classical music among millennials.

    Hosted in partnership with tea brand Brooke Bond Taj Mahal, the specially curated ‘Unwind with Taj’ caters to millennials to help them discover the splendor of classical music, which showcases our music heritage. The collection features Indian classical maestros such as Ustad Zakir Hussain, Ustad Shahid Parvez, Ronu Majumdar, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Anoushka Shankar among others. According to the company, the playlist has been created to make Indian classical music more accessible and available to millennials and sustain its legacy.

    Coupled with Brooke Bond Taj Mahal’s gourmet Indian flavors, the timed playlist will also change as the day progresses. While the ‘Morning Raga’ will entertain millennials by the day, the ‘Focus Instrumental Music’ will help evoke bouts of serenity amidst a chaotic work–from–home afternoon, said the music streaming app.

    “Gaana constantly looks forward to bringing novelty to the Indian music fan,” said Times Internet, CEO Gautam Sinha. “We believe in the rich legacy and glory of Indian classical music and are thrilled to join Brooke Bond Taj Mahal in initiating a movement to add the timeless aura of this genre. As millennials become more than receptive towards newer genres of music, we are certain they would be mesmerised by the beauty of Indian classical music, and enjoy its changing ragas through the course of the day.”

    Tea & Foods (HUL) vice-president Shiva Krishnamurthy added, “Brooke Bond Taj Mahal has a deep-rooted association with classical music and the brand has always sought ways to champion it. This campaign is an effort to instill an appreciation of Hindustani classical in millennials, by leveraging their listening behavior and giving them the perfect playlists to match their moods.”

  • Ad volumes on music genre see steep rise in Q4: TAM

    Ad volumes on music genre see steep rise in Q4: TAM

    NEW DELHI: Covid2019 impacted nearly every genre on television. People were forced to stay indoors and as a result they spent a lot of time watching news, movies, music and shows on TV, resulting in a massive viewership spike.

    Films / shows, news and music were the key source of entertainment for the audiences. The music genre platforms created curated lists to offer respite to audiences from news of the pandemic. However, the genre was hit in terms of advertising, like many others.  

    TAM recently released data that showed ad volumes per day fell sharply in Q2 but witnessed a sharp rise in Q4. In Q2 it fell to just 56 hours per day, whereas it surged to 157 hours per day in Q4. This is in line with the fact that 90 per cent advertisers paused advertising in the early days of the pandemic and only started resuming their spends during the early Unlock phase.

    The monthly share of ad volumes for the genre is as follows. It depicts the growth in the genre barring December 2020, when it registered a slight decline.

    The data clearly reflects that the genre clocked the lowest ad volumes in the last five years.

    The top five sub genres in 2019 were – Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Punjabi, while in 2020 the top sub genres were Hindi, Tamil, Punjabi, Telugu, and Kannada.

    Personal care and food & beverages sectors were the leading advertisers in this genre, however, toilet soaps, toilet/floor cleaners and e-comm/entertainment/social media were the leading advertising categories in the genre in 2020.

    HUL and Reckitt Benckiser India were the leading advertisers, while Dettol Antiseptic, Dettol Toilet Soaps and Lizol were the leading brands in the genre.

    The report also highlighted that ad volumes had a split of 63:37 between national and regional. In 2019, this split was nearly the same.

    During the Unlock phase, the movie genre saw nearly 120 hours of average ad volumes per day, which was 93 per cent more than the lockdown period.

    Ad volumes were maximum on primetime band and the 20-40 seconder ad format still ruled the segment.

  • Tips Industries mulling demerger of film division

    Tips Industries mulling demerger of film division

    NEW DELHI: The board of directors of Tips Industries has in-principal agreed to consider the demerger of the film division of the company into a separate entity.

    A demerger committee formed by the board will appoint the valuer, merchant banker for fairness opinion and other intermediaries for this purpose. The board on receipt of the valuation report will study, discuss and initiate the next steps.

    Following this announcement, the Kumar Taurani-led company’s stocks declined 1.2 per cent on the NSE.

    Over the years, Tips’ film division has churned out many popular Bollywood flicks like all three instalments of the Race franchise, Coolie No.1 , Entertainment, Ambarasiya, and Kunwara, to name a few.

    Tips Industries is extremely popular for its large library of music and has a strong forte in music promotion. It recently inked a global deal with Facebook, under which the social media giant has licensed its music for videos and other social experiences across Facebook and Instagram. With the move, Facebook and Instagram users will be able to add Tips' music catalogue to their posts and stories.

  • How MTV Beats is beating its way to the top

    How MTV Beats is beating its way to the top

    MUMBAI: What do you do when you turn four? In the television business, you celebrate big. And if you are a channel from the MTV stable, you can even choose to go wacky, quirky and fun – just like the audience you target. In the case of MTV Beats  it is choosing to go gibberish. As part of its #shandaarchaar campaign, it has introduced 31 unique gibberish puzzles based on movies, Bollywood stars, songs, singers etc which half-way through have attracted participation from 10 million viewers.

    Additionally, MTV Beats partnered with The Belgian Waffle Co., and released a MTV Beats Shaandaar Chaar Combo special, which is available on their leading food delivery partners Zomato and Swiggy. It is sponsored by The Originally Fresh Brand, Celio and Roadmaster Cycles.

    The channel has also launched a new show House Party With Dj Chetas that revolves around Bollywood remixes. The show brings in foot-tapping party music every Saturday and Sunday at 9 pm.

    According to Viacom18 Voot select, youth, music, and English entertainment head Ferzad Palia the show is unique because it fulfills the need of youngsters who are still not completely open to partying at crowded clubs.

    Palia further highlighted that in 2020  MTV Beats’ marketshare has grown to be 18 per cent in the overall music genre.

    Said he: “With five original shows, MTV Beats lockdown programming has been the biggest gainer in viewership and engagement in the entire genre with cumulative reach of 111 million and 2.5 billion viewing mins. The channel’s content-around-music saw weekly viewership spike by 27 per cent. MTV Beats was the only channel in the genre to clock positive gains in the east (three per cent), west (one per cent), north (three per cent), and south (23 per cent) regions collectively. Most importantly, viewership growth was not skewed but equally distributed across markets, not even leaving behind the south region – an uncharacteristic phenomenon for Hindi music channels.”

    MTV Beats has been transformed from being a music to now a complete youth channel. According to BARC India,  MTV beats is in the third position in (U+R market). B4U Music is on the top spot followed by Masti. B4U Music was the leading music television channel across India with over 117 million weekly viewers from 26 September to 2 October 2020. The other music channels on the list are 9XM and Bindass. MTV Beats play music for two to three hours a day, especially during the morning hours. The rest of the time is dedicated to content. That’s also the prime reason why the network launched MTV Beats three years ago.

    Palia shared that the channel has seen more than a 50 per cent jump in ad inventory fills with advertiser categories spread across – e-Commerce, social networking apps, OTT services, consumer durables, apparel, food delivery services, and edutech clients.

    He added that MTV Beats has been branching out to make mainstream music more inclusive, be it with a dedicated slot for Punjabi music – Punjabi Beats, a gender-atypical music album – MTV Beats Love Duet, and further encouraging its platform for independent artists with MTV Beats Discover.

    Palia further mentioned, “We also tailor our content to best suit the needs of our viewers. Thus with shows like House Party with DJ Chetas (dance music), Love Beats with Darshan Raval (young love problems), Baba Ki Chowki with Dr Sanket Bhosle (quirky/ humorous) we cater to the various moods of the young audience and have thus been able to become an integral part of their daily lives. All these shows have helped us to garner major eyeballs."

    Palia doesn’t look at other channels and the consumption of music videos on Youtube  as a challenge or a threat for him the ultimate winner is music. “Overall consumption has grown manifold and one medium is not cannibalizing the other. Consumption of music on TV has grown heavily over the last few years while music consumption on digital has also gone through the roof,” he clarified. “It’s fairly clear that the world is now consuming music at a pace and scale that they couldn’t earlier – largely on-the-go consumption. So all-in-all, music wins. Nobody loses. People also consume TV for different reasons, one of which is that it is curated which is a comfort for most consumers. Repeat consumption of a video or an audio stream then takes place across mediums. So each medium complements the other.”

    For MTV Beats, the target group is specifically  15-30-year olds and it clocked up a  cumulative reach of 136 million with that audience in 2020. Palia pointed out that the channel is well placed in the FreeDish households with significant engagement growth garnered in these four years. He also shared that it  is still rural heavy with 55 per cent of its audience from that demographic. Tier 3 and  tier 4 semi-urban towns have also witnessed steady growth.

     MTV Beats as a brand has strived to scale-up its programming and generate good content by leveraging its brand value and artist relations. “Our shows happen purely basis the artists’ faith in the brand. Our strategy is to always take the viewing experience to the next level and further establish the brand as the strongest music contender in the market and truly become the go-to brand that is all for the artist's community and the industry,” Palia explained.

    His  long-term plan is to build MTV Beats as the music currency in the country. He opined. “Not only are we planning on new seasons for existing shows, but MTV Beats is all geared up to create brand new shows in sync with themes like humor, artist interaction and everything music.”

    That should be music for its viewers ears.

  • Chrome DM week 47: Religious genre emerges as top gainer

    Chrome DM week 47: Religious genre emerges as top gainer

    KOLKATA: All the different genres of television channels have seen marginal growth in the week 47, 2020 of Chrome Data Analytics and Media data. Religious genre is the top gainer with a marginal growth of 0.19 per cent.

    In this genre, Sanskar has gained the highest OTS with 98.2 in the HSM excl < 1 market. OTS is the actual census-based percentage connectivity of a channel spread across 81 million homes, as reported by Chrome DM, across analogue cable, digital cable, and DTH.

    This week, music and youth genre has emerged second on the top gainers list with a growth of 0.03 per cent in the HSM excl <1 market. In the music genre, MTV Beats has gained the highest OTS with 91.5 per cent.

  • Zee TV launches first-ever music league, Indian Pro Music League

    Zee TV launches first-ever music league, Indian Pro Music League

    MUMBAI: With the ongoing festive season, Zee TV has been packing one exciting surprise after another for its audiences by way of three new fiction shows in October and another exciting supernatural fantasy thriller Brahmarakshas on its way in November. Things are only going to get bigger and better in the coming year as the channel is all set to revolutionise the face and sound of music on television in early 2021. In what will be a clutter-breaking format innovation on reality TV, Zee TV in collaboration with Fathom Pictures will present audiences with the world’s first ever music league, the ‘Indian Pro Music League’ (IPML).

    While the world of sports has seen several league competitions, be it in India or abroad, this first-of-its-kind music league will have six teams owned by the likes of Shraddha Kapoor along with her father and brother – Shakti Kapoor and Siddhant Kapoor, Govinda along with wife Sunita, Rajkummar Rao, and Riteish Deshmukh along with wife Genelia D’Souza Deshmukh, representing different regions of India, battling it out against each other in a musical championship. 

    Each of these teams will have celebrated playback singers, one male and one female vocalist as their captain. Additionally, every team will also have reality stars and to add to this pool of talent, six fresh voices from various regions of the country, one for each team, will get a chance to be a part of this league! To be hosted by two top anchors, the Indian Pro Music League will be launched in early 2021. Akin to the format of a sports league, the show will have five innings comprising the league matches and a super match where audience votes and umpire points will decide the outcome of the league and declare one of the teams as the league champions.

    About the format breakthrough, Zee TV business head Aparna Bhosle said, “At Zee TV, we constantly endeavour to provide audiences with new, unique and cutting-edge content that gives them a sense of novelty alongside engaging entertainment for the entire family. Over the years, we've seen how league formats have become immensely popular amongst sports viewers and as a country where Cricket is nothing short of a religion, audiences at large, have embraced and internalised this exciting format. With the Indian Pro Music League, the idea is to infuse the space of music reality television with the same energy and competitive spirit that is typical of a sports league. The quotient of excitement and anticipation is enhanced by top Bollywood stars and sports celebrities owning the six teams that will compete in the championship. While we have the top playback singers of the country as our team captains and rising reality stars on board to ensure the highest bar of excellence in the music the show will produce, we're on a quest to find some new talented singers from across the country through an intensive scouting initiative as Zee TV has always believed in leveraging the strength of its reality formats to give the common man an opportunity of chasing his dreams.”

    Zee Studios will be the creative and production house on the show.

  • Saregama plots Carvaan’s post-Covid journey

    Saregama plots Carvaan’s post-Covid journey

    MUMBAI: ‘Who buys a transistor radio in the times of iPods and apps?’

    Well that was the narrative until 2015. Then came Saregama’s Carvaan which shattered that myth by launching what looked like a classical retro transistor radio, the kind we see in antique stores. But within the box was housed silicon, which stored oodles of songs, an easy to use digital dial and radio player, and good sounding speakers. The Caravan went on to become a runaway hit, selling more than a million units in just 16 months of its launch and has become a case study in management courses worldwide.

    To its credit, it also managed to bring back the publicly listed firm from the brink. Part of the RPG SanjivGoenka group, Saregama had a solid back catalogue of 120,000 songs (from 1903 to 1983), but was not able to monetise it well enough. And the company was struggling with low revenues.  Caravan allowed its classic songs in various languages – – including Hindi, Tamil, Punjabi, Bengali, Malayalam and Marathi – and genres based on artistes and moods to be bundled with it and make more money for the company than it ever did from music publishing and licensing.

    The product portfolio today consists of: Carvaan (priced at Rs 6,000), Carvaan Premium (Rs 6,990), Carvaan 2.0 (Rs 7,990), Carvaan Gold (Rs 10,900), Carvaan Gold 2.0 (Rs 12,990),  Carvaan Go (Rs  3,990), Carvaan Go 2.0 (Rs 4590),  Carvaan Gold (Rs 5590) Carvaan Mini (Rs 2,490)  and Carvaan earphones (Rs 1199). The basic models have blue tooth, USB, AM/FM radio, while the more premium 2.0 models have wifi and some of them even sport fancy Harman/kardon speakers. Owners of a few of the models also get access to the Carvaan app on the App Store and the Google Play store and can access numerous podcasts online.

    Saregama MD Vikram Mehra says that the entire ethos of Carvaan is a leaned back listening experience. Mehra describes it as a physical product in a world where everything is moving digital. “After dedicated research we came out with Carvaan that was indeed a marriage of the digital with the physical. It was more like a portable digital player, similar to an older generation transistor that operated with just pressing of a button. It had pre-loaded songs and could also be tuned in to FM Radio, without any operational complications ideal for people who just wanted to sit back and relax,” shares Mehra.

    Read more news on Saregama

    The genesis of Carvaan began when Mehra – who had come in from Tata Sky in 2014 – and his team refused to accept feedback that associates and consultants were giving them: no one was interested in old Kishore Kumar, LataMangeshkar songs that Saregama had. Mehra, a retro music lover, believed that there surely must be others like him for whom the only sense of relaxation comes from listening to old classics.

    He then commissioned a qualitative study across 23 different cities nationwide to find what kind of music people are listening and the issues they faced accessing its catalogue. One of the key findings was that some music lovers believed that Saregama was hoarding its music and not releasing it for them to consume.

    “The moment we went out of the four metros, a very dramatic picture revealed that the people who loved Saregama music told us that we were not sharing our music with them, although we were present on all digital platforms like Gaana, Saavn etc. This was the reality we faced in 2015, ”reveals Mehra.

    Saregama decided to sack the consultants, and bid them goodbye. Further probing revealed that retro music lovers 45 years and older were put off by the complicated music apps on their mobile phones, one of the reasons they could not listen to the songs they had grown up with.

    Read more news on Vikram Mehra

    “They were worried that money would be deducted at the press of a button on their mobile phones. Most of them thus used it for free apps like Facebook, WhatsApp or for calling only,” recalls Mehra.

    What could Saregama marry its retro catalogue with to help these older music aficionados between the ages of 45 and 70  to enjoy their music?

    The answer was:  create a simple piece of hardware which could serve the songs digitally and would appeal to them as it looked and was easy to use.

    In brainstorming meetings with their boss SanjivGoenka, a team member pointed to an old Murphy transistor radio, saying the older audience would identify with that. “This is how we came with the look and feel,” Goenka has been quoted in media reports.  “Then there was a campaign which was very targeted, focused and emotional. It was about gifting a product to your parents. It worked.”

    Mehra asserts that in 2014 when he joined the company, experts had been very clear that nobody would pay for music in India.  And that’s been disproved by Saregama’sCarvaan. “We have sold two million units till January 2020 whereas, the total amount of paid subscriptions for the nine music apps in India is less than 1 million.”

    Amid the lockdown, when economies and businesses came to a standstill, Saregamawas inundated with requests from buyers wanting delivery of a Carvaan, and from users who narrated how it helped them through the ennui and fear by entertaining them in the confines of their homes.

    It gave the Saregama team a good insight into to how much the older generation has come to depend on their Carvaans, almost like a companion.

    “We got so many requests to deliver Carvaan directly to homes since shops and online deliveries were closed. The moment restrictions were lifted, our online sales picked up heavily.  Though the trade did suffer as expected but things are coming back on track,” says Mehra.

    The company has cut back on ad spends and is working hard to service the bottled-up demand, for now, at least.

    Its focus currently is on increasing the online content available to Carvaan 2.0 – which can hook up to wifi  – owners. Currently, they have access to 282 different streams of podcasts – across genres like food, travel, Bollywood, news, music. Content creators make money through revenue share deals the company has signed with them. Mehra believes that opportunities lie in placing adverts too.

    Apart from further extending Carvaan, Mehrahe is milking the catalogue that Saregama owns. It recently entered into a licensing deal with Facebook which allows its members to use its songs in the videos which they upload to their profiles. Says Mehra: “It’s a great time to partner with Facebook, Sharechat, and Moj. These are huge platforms and used widely to create content. We have seen a great usage of our content on these platforms across age groups. Our entire catalogue has been made available across these social media platforms for users to create interesting content.”

    Mehra’s belief is that “Saregama houses a treasure in its song catalogue, which is a national treasure which must be passed on from generation to generation.”

    Under his stewardship, Saregama has done well for the current older generation, at least.