While
performing at a private show at Terminal 5 in New York for Tidal subscribers,
Jay Z launched into a blistering attack against those he said are criticizing
his new streaming service, Tidal. He lashed out at Google, Youtube, Spotify and
a host of others.
He
claimed he was being depicted as 'the bad guy' because he's going against the
grain, before turning on Google and YouTube for underpaying artists, claiming
they 'pay you a tenth of what you supposed to get'. 'You know n***as die for
equal pay right? You know when I work I ain't your slave right?' he
rapped.
Then he even
turned on people he called hypocrites, who dared to complain about Tidal's high
prices topping off Jay Z's $520 million fortune, when they never complained
about filling Steve Jobs' or Phil Knight's pockets when they were buying
iPhones and Nikes.
'Oh,
n***as are skeptical 'cause they own shit - You bought nine iPhones and Steve
Jobs is rich, Phil Knight worth trillions you still bought those kicks,' he
said, before rounding on enemy number one: 'Spotify is 9 billion they ain't say
sh*t '.
The
B-sides show was only open to Tidal subscribers who compiled a playlist of the
rappers lesser known tracks as part of a competition.
He has
tried to defend his fledgling streaming service a number of times before.
At the
end of April, he said: 'The iTunes Store wasn't built in a day. It took Spotify
9 years to be successful.
We are
here for the long haul. Please give us a chance to grow and get better.'
In its
first month it flopped in the iTunes app store charts, despite a launch from
big names.
It is not
known why the app has dropped so significantly but the price may be considered
too high for some users.
Tidal
currently has more than 25 million songs and 75,000 music videos in its
library. It is billed as the first artist-owned platform for music and
video and the service aims to compete directly with Spotify and Apple's music
service, headed by Dr Dre.
Users can
pay either $9.95 a month for a standard streaming service or $19.99 for high
quality streaming in the US.
Unlike
rival Spotify, the service doesn't have a free tier - meaning the musicians
stand to make more money from it, but this also means it doesn't play adverts.
Many users who
downloaded it and are using it during the trial period may be looking to cancel
their subscriptions or uninstall the app.

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