SoundExchange CEO Michael Huppe claims FM radio hurts music sales

SoundExchange CEO Michael Huppe claims FM radio hurts music sales, fails to set trends, and profits enormously to the tune of $17 billion a year while failing to fairly compensate musicians and labels. The US based Huppe made his case at a New Music Seminar by presenting three key points in history where he claimed FM radio either had no impact or hurt music sales: The 1920s-1940s when the dawn of radio allegedly stalled the sales of records following the the launch of the phonograph; the 1970s UK when commercial radio first hit and had a “negligible impact on music,” according to a University of Texas study by Stan Liebowitz; and a more recent example of Cumulus radio’s introduction in New York City last year of NASH-FM country radio, which he claimed had no increase on country music sales.