Led Zeppelin goes digital

Buying an upload to heaven

Written by Iain Thomson

Led Zeppelin has joined the increasing numbers of artists who are bypassing record companies and selling their music online.

The band will make its back catalogue available online for the first time on 13 November, and will release a greatest hits album on the same day.

Later in the month the band will play a one-off charity gig at The O2 in London, for which one million people have applied to get tickets.

"We are pleased that the complete Led Zeppelin catalogue will now be available digitally," said guitarist Jimmy Page.

"The addition of the digital option will better enable fans to obtain our music in whichever manner they prefer."

More and more bands are turning to the internet as a distribution channel, or indeed to replace record companies altogether.

The Beatles are poised to sign a deal to make their music available online, and some bands have ignored traditional record companies altogether and gone completely online.

"The digital download market is growing at an exceptional rate," said Paul Hague, managing director of the British Internet Broadcasting Company.

"Consumers and content owners now understand the huge benefits of the download market in terms of cost and accessibility. Digital downloading is overtaking record sales fast and is the future of media entertainment."

Tags:

Further reading

Virgin Digital shuts up shop

Download service to be closed next month   More...

Starbucks brews iTunes Wi-Fi giveaway

50 million free tracks to push iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store   More...

SpiralFrog launches free US music site

Ad-supported site to offer 800,000 songs and 3,500 music videos   More...

Sony ditches proprietary music format

Atrac audio format and Connect Music Services given the elbow   More...

Related articles

Online music companies thrive as old firms struggle

Old music business model 'dead and gone'   More...

Sellaband success prompts industry rethink

Alternative record label gives cause for thought   More...

Apple lands another Beatle

John Lennon catalogue to sell on iTunes   More...

Nine Inch Nails tells fans to steal music

Trent Reznor expresses outrage at cost of band's CDs   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

22 Jul 2008

3.22 MBSat-nav crashes, open source security and female gamers More...

21 Jul 2008

3.12 MBGlobal internet reach, online spending and the space race More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Security

Major DNS flaw revealed

Experts sound alarms over early disclosure   More...

Nintendo DS

Dodgy Chinese Nintendo chargers recalled

Experience could shock some users   More...

Advertisement

Houses of Parliament

Official 'spying' requests top 500,000

Information includes web records and itemised phone bills   More...

Hacking

Small firms naïve about security

SMBs remain prone to attack, says study   More...

Advertisement