AT&T Offers Napster Music to Mobile Users

October 22, 2007 | by Geoff Duncan

AT&T and Napster have announced that AT&T mobile users will be able to buy songs using their mobile phones for $1.99 apiece, or $7.49 for five tunes.

AT&T and Napster have announced an expansion to their existing agreement that enables Napster users to transfer their songs to selected AT&T handsets. Under the new plan, AT&T customers will be able to download songs wirelessly from Napster's catalog of about 5 million tracks directly to their cell phones. The songs will be priced at $1.99 each, or $7.49 for a bundle of five tunes: users who opt for the Five-Track Pack from their phone will receive their first five songs free.. The service is scheduled to be available in mid-November.

"We are pleased to be partnering with AT&T to provide its more than 63 million wireless customers with the best digital music offering available," said Napster president Brad Duea, in a statement. "Together, Napster and AT&T will deliver 5 million songs to customers' handsets, along with the best discovery tools and download capabilities to the palms of customers' hands."

AT&T says the agreement says it is the only national service provider to iffer customers the ability to purchase full-track songs over the air from both Napster and eMusic. In addition to the Napster deal, AT&t;T also announced MobiVJ (a new streaming video service for $6.99/month) and VIP Access, a mobile music fan club and "discovery service" that will be available for $2.99/month.

The pricing of AT&T's over-the-air has raised some eyebrows, since it's considerably higher than prices for the same tracks via traditional download services. AT&T is obviously betting the spontaneous decision to buy music over-the-air will mitigate its high price point, as users make spur-of-the-moment decisions to purchase music. AT&T says the songs will download to handsets in about a minute.

AT&T has not released a list of handsets that will be compatible with the service…but we can guess one phone that won't be on the list: the Apple iPhone.

Napster and AT&T previously pacted on mobile music toward the end of 2004, which enabled Napster To Go customers to download an unlimited number of full-length songs wirelessly for about $15/month.

Post Your Comment...Comments

TechFreak on Oct 23rd, 2007 at 8:55 AM:

I thought Napster had recently filed for bankruptcy? I guess they must be back from the dead.

Comment on this article




Please keep your comments relevant to this article. Email addresses are not displayed, they are only required to verify you are human.

When you submit your comment, an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. Once you have clicked on that confirmation link your comment will be posted.

HTML is not allowed.




Join our newsletter to keep up to date on the latest Digital Trends content like Videos, Reviews, News and more delivered directly to your email!


Plus, get early access to contests and specials from our partners. Join today!





Loading...