Australian native music is in decline, and UK, Canada aren’t far behind, new report warns
The advice algorithms utilized by streaming providers are the primary purpose why Australia’s native artists are seeing a income decline, although Australians themselves are spending extra on music, a brand new report says.
The report warns that different English-speaking international locations – apart from the USA – are going through an analogous drawback.
Australia’s recorded music revenues grew by almost 28% between 2021 and 2024, from USD $417.5 million to $534 million – however revenues from native acts truly fell throughout this era, from $50.9 million to $44.8 million. Australian music’s market share fell from 12% to 8% in that point.
Had native revenues stored up with general development, “an extra $40 million would have flowed again to the home business in simply three years,” the report famous.
“Australia is now the worldwide poster youngster for what ‘market failure’ seems like in recorded music,” the report acknowledged. “A vicious cycle dangers taking root, with more and more fewer home success tales leading to much less home funding, which means even decrease possibilities of future success. Intervention is required to cease the rot.”

The report, written for public coverage suppose tank The Australia Institute by famous music economist Will Web page and Australia Institute Analysis Director Morgan Harrington, says the issue is algorithmic.
Suggestion algorithms favor content material within the person’s personal language. That has labored out very effectively for a lot of native music markets which have their very own language, as Web page famous in prior analysis, with native music experiencing a growth in reputation.
“Even international locations as small as Denmark, which has simply 5.5 million individuals talking the identical language, are seeing Danish-language artists dominate their charts,” the report famous.
“Sixteen of the highest 20 albums (and 15 of the highest 20 songs) in Denmark final 12 months had been by Danish artists, performing in Danish.”
However in English-language international locations like Australia, the UK and Canada, suggestion algorithms overwhelmingly floor music from the US, which is much and away the biggest supply of English-language recorded music.
“Streaming platforms have turned discovery into a world contest by which Australian artists singing in English are competing with the huge American catalog,” former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull wrote within the report’s foreword.
“This digital ‘one-way valve’ that sends our listening offshore displays a broader problem of sovereignty within the digital age.”
“Australia is now the worldwide poster youngster for what ‘market failure’ seems like in recorded music.”
Will Web page and Morgan Harrington
To a lesser extent, the UK and Canada are seeing an analogous drawback.
“The UK has witnessed an embarrassing drought since streaming took off, failing to supply a very worldwide success since Dua Lipa in 2017,” the report acknowledged.
“Certainly, within the 5 years because the begin of this decade, the UK has seen solely 30 new artists debut amongst their native prime 1,000.”
Canadian artists are “encroached upon by the dominance of its southerly neighbor, with a gradual decline of home presence compounded by a ‘expertise drain’ the place a lot of their very own main breakthrough artists are signed and managed out of the USA.”
But if the issue within the UK and Canada isn’t as massive as it’s in Australia, it could be because of the truth the UK continues to have outsized cultural affect, and its legacy acts like Queen and Oasis proceed to usher in income by the tens of millions.
In Canada’s case, the issue is mitigated partly by numerous packages governments have set as much as defend and prop up the nation’s cultural industries, the report says. (And the success of Drake and The Weeknd doesn’t damage both, we’d add.)
The report urges Australia to take a web page out of Canada’s ebook. It factors to the Starmaker Fund, a program that gives cash to Canadian artists touring internationally so as to add further dates to their excursions. This system is funded by charges from non-public broadcasters. (Canada just lately up to date its telecom legal guidelines to require streaming providers to pay into the fund as effectively, one thing the providers are difficult in courtroom.)
“This digital ‘one-way valve’ that sends our listening offshore displays a broader problem of sovereignty within the digital age.”
Malcolm Turnbull, ex-Prime Minister of Australia
The report additionally urges the Australian authorities to work with streaming providers like Spotify to develop native, human content material curators for streaming audiences.
“Curators that may compile playlists related to a selected metropolis or area (a few of whom might also be native radio stations, native live performance venues or native artists themselves) can manage and differentiate music in ways in which algorithms both can’t or don’t,” the report stated.
It additionally notes that some broadcasters have built-in streaming providers into their apps and web sites, in order that listeners can add tracks they prefer to their playlists. Against this, standard radio stations run by the Australian Broadcasting Company solely enable listeners to listen to the music on the airwaves or on its “comparatively obscure” ABC Hear app, the report stated.
“Why not make extra of this nice native content material obtainable to the world on different platforms, together with Apple Music, Spotify and YouTube, the place tons extra individuals can uncover it?”
Whereas the difficulty of declining native music has been on the radar of Aussie politicians for a number of years at this level, the concept that streaming providers are damaging native music is getting some pushback from Spotify, which just lately launched survey outcomes exhibiting that 85% of Australians “are glad with their capability to find new music on streaming platforms.”
Spotify’s analysis additionally discovered that 81% of streaming customers “say it’s simple to seek out Australian artists,” and 61% are “glad with the quantity of Australian music obtainable and accessible to them.”
“The information tells a constructive story: that 81% of listeners really feel Australian music is seen, accessible, and straightforward to discover on streaming platforms,” stated Alicia Sbrugnera, Spotify’s Head of Music Growth for Australia and New Zealand.
“We all know that once we help the discoverability of latest music, we’re supporting the complete Australian music ecosystem – for artists, venues, labels, and followers – and thru this new analysis, followers have informed us that it’s working.”Music Enterprise Worldwide
