Zune Pass Changes, Heads to Canada

Microsoft announced on Thursday that it is changing its Zune Music Pass (which I thought was called Zune Pass--when did this change?) subscription service and bringing it and the Zune Music Marketplace to Canada.

There are two changes coming to Zune Music Pass. First, Microsoft is adding music video download and streaming to the service and will offer "tens of thousands of music videos" through the Zune PC software and, later this fall, the Xbox 360. Second, Microsoft is eliminating the $14.99 per month subscription offering, which includes 10 free MP3 song downloads each month, and replacing it with a $9.99 per month offering that does not include the downloads.

Customers who are already using the existing subscription offering can continue to do so and will receive the 10 free songs each month for the duration of their subscriptions. But the new offering will take effect on October 3, 2011; any new subscriptions from that point on will utilize the lower price point (and not gain access to the free song downloads).

One item not mentioned in the Microsoft blog post is that the number of devices you can use with a Zune Music Pass is going down with the new subscription: With the $14.99 subscription, you can connect up to three PCs and three portable devices (Windows Phones and/or Zune devices). But with the new $9.99 offering, you can only connect four devices, which can be any combination of PCs and portable devices.

Microsoft says that its Zune Music Pass service features "unlimited, on-demand access to more than 14 million songs and tens of thousands of music videos."

Meanwhile, Microsoft is also bringing Zune Music Pass and Zune Music Marketplace to Canada, a scant five years after it launched its first Zune products and services in the US. These services will also rollout on October 3, 2011, Microsoft says.

Discuss this Article 14

jvd897
on Sep 29, 2011
"A scant five years" -- indeed. Perhaps they're gearing up for the Xbox Music service in Windows 8...
sirdilbert
on Sep 29, 2011
Who needs to keep music anyway with Zune and Spotify around. Saves on my Home Server space.
mcwilliams132
on Sep 29, 2011
Yea for the lower price but loosing the 10 songs per month kind of kills it for me. This last year I had the annual pass, but it renews in Oct and I may just forget it. Uhg!
tristandyer
on Sep 29, 2011
Do you know if this will include the associated marketplaces or just music? For instance we don't have the podcast marketplace up here. This is painful for instance if you click subscribe on a podcast from your mango phone as it will kill the copies of the podcast on your device then fail to download new copies as the marketplace isn't available. And of course Zune can download the podcasts, just not the phone.
bspradley
on Sep 29, 2011
My thought is that they changed the name from Zune Pass to Zune Music Pass to reflect that fact that Zune will just be music. Their XBOX LIVE TV service will cover all things video. I am guessing that Podcast will be included with the music stuff in Zune. Either way, having a Zune pass is a good deal. I will continue to opt for the 14.99 and 10 music downloads as long as I can.
spivonious
on Sep 29, 2011
Make a $5/month streaming-only service and I'm there.
jswanitz
on Sep 29, 2011
I am sticking with my current subscription so that I have access to the 10 free songs per month. There is just something about that model I like. Sometimes, songs that I have purchased will drop from the Zune service, and are not available for download any longer. This is VERY rare, but it has happened in the past. The price difference for the new subscription is enticing though, and in the future I may switch depending on my needs. The 10 free is what made Zune subscription so attractive when it first launched. That, and the superior Zune player, but we all know how well that was received. I still ove mine!
Rensul
on Sep 29, 2011
I'm glad I can keep the current Zune Pass but I'm sure it will also end sometime next year - Hopefully it will be replaced with some kind of super Xbox Live package... Paul - "Zune Pass" became "Zune Music Pass" with the Zune Client software 4.8 update... Rensul
stun13
on Sep 29, 2011
Translation, get your Zune pass now before the reason for using it goes away. Although, I've noticed some tighter intergration with Windows Phone 7.5 so maybe it will be worth keeping after some exec decides to kick us all off the 10 songs/month crack.
Waethorn
on Sep 29, 2011
Re: Zune Marketplace in Canada. About FRIGGIN' time! One of the biggest problems I could see with this though: are music publishers still going to limit singles and exclusive tracks to pay-per-download? Also, is Zune Marketplace in Canada going to offer pay-per-download, or just the Zune Music Pass? This is still far better than what the mobile operators offer, where you pay about $20/mth to access only about half-a-million songs. Paul, you should ask Microsoft if they got the licensing themselves, or if Puretracks is giving them access to the library. Puretracks has the biggest Canadian-exclusive song library available and they've done numerous licensing deals to other providers, including MSN partner, Bell Canada.
jvd897
on Sep 29, 2011
@Waethorn: I can't help but think that if Microsoft had just partnered up with Puretracks, this would have happened a long time ago.
ogman
on Sep 30, 2011
My reasons for sticking with Zune marketplace are (1) my Zune player and (2) the ten free songs per month. These differentiate Zune Pass from competitors. The Zune is already gone and now the ten free songs is on the way out. So, when my player dies and Microsoft decides to boot those grandfathered into the old plan, I'll be gone. So, the motivation behind this is Microsoft maybe having too many customers? I don't get it.
abw1987
on Oct 1, 2011
This is truly a shame. If I were to purchase a Zune Music Pass, I would not suddenly stop buying CDs. There is some music I would simply like to own, especially since once I cancel the Pass, my entire "rented" collection would disappear. I do understand that the $9.99 price point is FAR more competitive from a psychological as well as a practical standpoint. And I understand that 4 devices (instead of 6) enables MS to meet that price. But I do wish they hadn't gotten rid of the permanent downloads.
MikeM132
on Oct 4, 2011
Everybody seems to be pushing us dedicated music player users toward music on smartphones. Even Apple is phasing out some of their iPods. I have a Zune HD (love it---best of my many mp3 players) as well as a Windows Phone. Music on Windows Phone is fine, especially with the Zune Pass (which I am testing out right now---nice, so far). However, until MS figures out Audiobooks on Windows Phone, it's just not a replacement for a physical Zune yet. I did find that Zune subscription music syncs and plays fine on other players (Zen, Sansa so far). So I may drop Rhapsody and switch to Zune Music Pass (or whatever they call it) even if someday I no longer have my Zune HD. FWIW--the radio on my HD is excellent. The radio on my HTC Trophy is pathetic---in case MS is reading these things (doubtful).

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