First revenues from the music distribution service for Winamp

Winamp receives its first revenues from the music distribution service following an agreement with the Spanish company Sonosuite

Winamp receives its first revenues from the music distribution service following an agreement with the Spanish company Sonosuite

Llama Group and Winamp announced that they received the first revenues from their music distribution service following a collaboration agreement with Spanish company Sonosuite. This initial phase aimed to validate the entire technical workflow.

This agreement will enable Sonosuite to collect revenues from artists for its music distribution service to most digital platforms. 





After announcing the agreement with Mint last week to enable Bridger's subsidiary to collect royalties from authors, composers, and publishers, this new partnership will allow Bridger to collect all master and producer rights.

This is a first in the European market, as artists now have the ability to receive these different sources of income within the same platform.

"We're moving in the right direction and at a much faster pace, which means that by early next year, we'll have a complete platform enabling artists to create their own subscriptions, be distributed, receive income from streaming platforms and their royalties. We will complete this before the end of the year with the NFT part," explains Alexandre Saboundjian, CEO of Llama-Group.

We will also see the various iOS and Android players launch in the testing phase early next year.

Llama Group and Winamp announced that they received the first revenues from their music distribution service following a collaboration agreement with Spanish company Sonosuite. This initial phase aimed to validate the entire technical workflow.

This agreement will enable Sonosuite to collect revenues from artists for its music distribution service to most digital platforms. 





After announcing the agreement with Mint last week to enable Bridger's subsidiary to collect royalties from authors, composers, and publishers, this new partnership will allow Bridger to collect all master and producer rights.

This is a first in the European market, as artists now have the ability to receive these different sources of income within the same platform.

"We're moving in the right direction and at a much faster pace, which means that by early next year, we'll have a complete platform enabling artists to create their own subscriptions, be distributed, receive income from streaming platforms and their royalties. We will complete this before the end of the year with the NFT part," explains Alexandre Saboundjian, CEO of Llama-Group.

We will also see the various iOS and Android players launch in the testing phase early next year.

Llama Group and Winamp announced that they received the first revenues from their music distribution service following a collaboration agreement with Spanish company Sonosuite. This initial phase aimed to validate the entire technical workflow.

This agreement will enable Sonosuite to collect revenues from artists for its music distribution service to most digital platforms. 





After announcing the agreement with Mint last week to enable Bridger's subsidiary to collect royalties from authors, composers, and publishers, this new partnership will allow Bridger to collect all master and producer rights.

This is a first in the European market, as artists now have the ability to receive these different sources of income within the same platform.

"We're moving in the right direction and at a much faster pace, which means that by early next year, we'll have a complete platform enabling artists to create their own subscriptions, be distributed, receive income from streaming platforms and their royalties. We will complete this before the end of the year with the NFT part," explains Alexandre Saboundjian, CEO of Llama-Group.

We will also see the various iOS and Android players launch in the testing phase early next year.

Llama Group and Winamp announced that they received the first revenues from their music distribution service following a collaboration agreement with Spanish company Sonosuite. This initial phase aimed to validate the entire technical workflow.

This agreement will enable Sonosuite to collect revenues from artists for its music distribution service to most digital platforms. 





After announcing the agreement with Mint last week to enable Bridger's subsidiary to collect royalties from authors, composers, and publishers, this new partnership will allow Bridger to collect all master and producer rights.

This is a first in the European market, as artists now have the ability to receive these different sources of income within the same platform.

"We're moving in the right direction and at a much faster pace, which means that by early next year, we'll have a complete platform enabling artists to create their own subscriptions, be distributed, receive income from streaming platforms and their royalties. We will complete this before the end of the year with the NFT part," explains Alexandre Saboundjian, CEO of Llama-Group.

We will also see the various iOS and Android players launch in the testing phase early next year.

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