Entries tagged Free Music Downloads

Finding Free Mp3 Downloads Legally

Published: Feb 9th, 2010 | Author: Alex Bhaswara Add Comment

Looking for free mp3 downloads? Try eMusic! For a multi day free trial, you not only get free access to the eMusic catalog, for which you would otherwise need a special membership, but you get twenty five free songs just for taking eMusic for a spin.

Not that you need the free music, since eMusic's songs are 50 cents or less per track! While iTunes is increasing popular tracks from 99 cents to a $1.29, eMusic remains an excellent deal. It' has never been simpler to find mp3 downloads, and eMusic caters to the music-savvy population, knowing you'll need to download throughout the month. (more...)

Finding Free Mp3 Downloads Legally

Looking for free mp3 downloads? Try eMusic! For a multi day free trial, you not only get free access to the eMusic catalog, for which you would otherwise need a special membership, but you get twenty five free songs just for taking eMusic for a spin. Not that you need the free music, since eMusic's songs are 50 cents or less per track! While iTunes is increasing popular tracks from 99 cents to a $1.29, eMusic remains an excellent deal. It' has never been simpler to find mp3 downloads, and eMusic caters to the music-savvy population, knowing you'll need to download throughout the month.

Membership subscriptions come in four flavors : basic, plus, premium, and connoisseur. Each plan may be prologued with the multi-day free trial and the twenty-five free mp3 downloads. The basic plan includes twenty-four mp3 downloads for $11.99 per month, which comes to 50 cents per song. The positive membership offers 35 songs for $15.89, coming in at the smaller rate of forty five pennies per song. The price per song lowers still with the premium plan, to 42 cents per song at fifty monthly songs for $20.79, and down to 41 cents per song at seventy five monthly songs for $30.99 with the connoisseur plan. Buying twenty-four songs on iTunes at 99 cents a track would cost $23.76, about 2 times the price that you pay with eMusic. And that doesn't include iTunes chart-topping music that costs 30 cents more than the average track. what is the difference? You could ask. How can eMusic reason to make music so cheap? How is it able to afford to offer free mp3 downloads and then still keep the price per track so cheap? It comes in eMusic's willingness to push one or two indie labels that won't be seen anywhere else. Also, the DRM-free songs made eMusic a popular alternative in a point when digital rights management limitations were encoded into iTunes mp3 downloads. While this made eMusic an unappealing business for massive record labels in the past, eMusic has now been permitted to sell massive name music as long as the albums are two years or more past their release date. (more...)