What would a streaming service look like, if hard-nosed but
optimistic professional musicians built it? It would look like URSA, a
platform that weds artist-focused engagement, commerce, and context with
an intuitive, high-quality listener experience.
URSA is the only streaming service that features rich
artist-controlled profiles, including music, photos, videos, tour dates,
bios and more, all in one place. Fans can explore content related to
the song they’re currently listening to, including additional artwork
and liner notes. URSA's also the first streaming service to bring music
professionals to the forefront with linked credits, offering an exciting
new approach to music discovery. Using URSA, producers, mixers,
engineers, songwriters, instrumentalists, and other music makers can
create a profile, build their discographies and get the acknowledgement
they deserve.
This is by design. “We aren’t just delivering music,” says Chris
Jones, long-time singer songwriter and URSA founder. “We’re solving
problems for artists, which creates a deeper experience for fans.”
Current streaming platforms were designed to ease listeners away from
P2P file sharing, and thus focused almost exclusively on listeners’
ease. They packed the world’s music into one place, at one price, with
just the basics. Other aspects crucial to artists--meaningful contact
with fans, lyrics, liner notes, and other assets, revenue from sources
beyond recorded music--were afterthoughts, add-ons, or absent
altogether.
This was glaringly apparent to Jones and URSA co-founder, producer,
songwriter, and drummer Chad Royce. Both had cut their teeth in the New
York rock scene and gone on to professional careers playing in touring
bands, signing deals with major labels, and working as sidemen and hit
makers.
“If I produced a track or had a writing credit, there was no record
of that contribution, even if the song was reasonably successful. It was
almost impossible to trace,” Royce reflects, who has worked as a
producer with the likes of Me'shell Ndegecello. “Recently some streaming
services have added limited credits like songwriter and producer, but
on URSA artists can add as many different credits as they’d like. We’ve
also made these credits link to actual profiles so when a user taps on
one of these profiles they can view their whole discography, which is an
exciting and powerful way to discover new music. For instance, if you
like the production on a track, chances are you’ll like other music that
producer has worked on.”
“Over the years, when I was touring or at home trying to promote
shows and engage fans, everything was so dispersed and focused on one
aspect of my music. It was time consuming and incredibly frustrating,”
Jones notes. “You want to present a complete picture of who you are to
your fans. The task of endless link sharing dilutes the impact of your
content and creates needless work for fans. Ultimately, it felt like a
huge missed opportunity.”
Jones decided a better way was possible. He began poring over ideas
for a platform that would unite music streaming and the many ways fans
and artists interact, in a user-friendly, artist-centered experience. He
met up with Royce over a drink one evening, and they both saw the
potential. They decided they had to build it, since no one else had.
One of URSA’s key features, in addition to its wealth of assets and
its in-app commerce, is its social aspect. Social music may be an
Everest of sorts for music tech, a mountainside often attempted but
littered with past hopefuls and contenders. However, URSA takes the
artist view of feature design, putting the focus squarely on engagement
with the music and its contextual assets, not just on sharing tracks and
playlists.
That means the interactions on URSA aim to be more authentic, not
algorithm driven and not buried in the feed or populated with marketing
speak. “Most of the social music services have been fan oriented, about
sharing with your friends in various ways,” Royce explains. “No one has
done something completely artist-centric. On URSA, artists are the
center. The artist has to be on there and participating to make the
social features impactful and successful.”
“The social features all revolve around the artist profile, which
includes songwriters and producers,” says Jones. “These profiles are
hubs for features, places the fan can explore from. We’ve reimagined it
creating a space where features many users already know and like can all
coexist harmoniously. We wouldn’t label ourselves solely as a social
platform, but we made it a focus, because interaction and direct
engagement is crucial for artists and fans. In fact, we see it being an
essential part of the evolution of streaming.”
This approach mirrors the platform’s overarching vision for
empowering artists first, and letting that empowerment lead organically
to substantial engagement with a community of music lovers. This is a
lean-in, not a lean-back space, where artists’ ideas can rule and define
how their music is presented and savored.
“We’re bringing everything into one space where artists can add
context to their music, speak directly to their fans, publish a broader
array of content than ever before, while giving fans a more personal and
complete listening and engagement experience,” Jones says. “Musicians
have an entrepreneurial spirit, whether they know it or not. They are
making something from nothing. There’s a boldness there, and this
demands a platform that’s equally bold.
www.ursamusic.com
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