News | National
29 May 2025 10:22
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Discovering new NZ music in the streaming age is getting harder – what’s the future for local artists?

    Streaming and social media have transformed the way we discover music. But algorithms and programming formats mean local artists are disappearing in the global mix.

    Oli Wilson, Professor & Associate Dean Research, Te Kunenga ki Purehuroa – Massey University, Catherine Hoad, Senior Lecturer in Critical Popular Music Studies, Te Kunenga ki Purehuroa – Massey University, Dave Carter, Associate Professor, School of Musi
    The Conversation


    New Zealand Music Month turned 25 this year, and there’s been plenty to celebrate – whether it be Mokotron’s Taite Prize-winning Waerea, Lorde’s recent return (though not to New Zealand – yet), or the fact that live performance revenues post-COVID have been strong.

    But for new and emerging local artists, Music Month also highlights a lack of visibility on streaming services and commercial radio, which increasingly favour already famous artists, including ones whose heydays were decades ago.

    During a month when music fans have been encouraged to stream local, see local and buy local, so far the only homegrown artists to appear in this week’s New Zealand Top 40 Singles chart are Lorde and K-pop star Rosé.

    Recently published data shows that as little as 9% of New Zealand streaming, downloads and physical sales revenue is going to local artists. Despite this, according to NZ on Air, 49% of New Zealanders stream music every day. In fact streaming has recently surpassed radio as the main way audiences discover new music, with growing influence from TikTok and Instagram.

    On Spotify, which approximately one in three New Zealanders use every day, only one local track – Corella’s Blue Eyed Maori – featured in the 2024 top-50 year-end local playlist. Streaming increasingly privileges and skews towards established releases from well-known artists, and other artists have little control over social media algorithms.

    While radio remains relevant, with 46% of New Zealanders listening daily, only two nationwide commercial radio stations played more than 20% local music in 2024.

    Structural music industry changes

    The Official Aotearoa Music Charts’ End of Year Top 50 Singles provide another useful indication of local music market share. These charts draw on a wide range of sales and streaming data, and aim to provide an authoritative snapshot of what New Zealanders were buying and listening to in that year.

    Since COVID, we have seen a sharp decline in local artists featuring in these charts. In 2024, the only New Zealander to feature was Corella’s Blue Eyed Maori, and only four New Zealand albums featured in the End of Year Top 50 Albums, three of which were compilations primarily made up of earlier releases.

    Graph illustrating the share of NZ music in the album and singles chars between 2015 to 2024.
    Data sourced from aotearoamusiccharts.co.nz, operated by Recorded Music NZ. CC BY

    While COVID lockdowns and border closures hugely disrupted the live music sector, we also saw audiences engaging with a lot more local music. Summer festival Rhythm and Vines sold out an all Kiwi lineup, and the amount of local music on radio reached its highest peak since records began.

    This suggests visibility, discoverability and chart success have little to do with the amount or quality of local music being produced. Instead, they are the result of structural changes in the music industries.

    Internationally, this has been linked to the market consolidation and dominance of a small number of big players at the expense of local artists, industry and infrastructure.

    What can be done?

    As global platforms such as Spotify and TikTok have increased their influence on audiences’ ability to discover New Zealand’s music, it’s hard to see a future where business-as-usual will improve the situation for local artists and audiences.

    There are potential solutions, however. Australia has committed to imposing local content quotas on international streamers, and Canada has instituted a revenue sharing system between global streamers and broadcasters.

    Unlike similar markets, such as Australia and Norway, New Zealand lacks a strong public youth broadcaster. Dedicated investment in this area could help support targeted strategies to promote local music.

    Changes in the way local music is funded and nurtured could also help. The government currently funds NZ on Air and the Music Commission, but they have different objectives and obligations. Merging them might streamline decision making and recognise the interconnectedness of the live and recorded music sectors.

    If steps aren’t taken soon, New Zealand will struggle to support a thriving local music economy, and New Zealanders will continue to miss out on hearing themselves in the music they listen to.

    With Music Month drawing to a close, there needs to be a commitment to structural changes that, over time, will see the development of a year-round celebration of New Zealand music.

    The Conversation

    Oli Wilson has previously completed research in partnership with or commissioned by APRA AMCOS, Toi Mai Workforce Development Council, Manatu Taonga Ministry for Culture & Heritage and the NZ Music Commission. He has also received funding, or contributed to projects that have benefited from funding from NZ on Air, the NZ Music Commission and Recorded Music New Zealand. He has provided services to The Chills, owns shares in TripTunz Limited, and is a writer member of APRA AMCOS.

    Catherine Hoad has completed research in partnership with or commissioned by APRA AMCOS, Toi Mai Workforce Development Council, Manatu Taonga Ministry for Culture & Heritage, NZ On Air, Screen Industry Guild of Aotearoa New Zealand, and the NZ Music Commission.

    Dave Carter is a writer member of APRA AMCOS. He has received research funding from Manatu Taongao Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Toi Mai Workforce Development Council, APRA AMCOS, Music NT, Music Tasmania, The Australian Live Music Office, Arts South Australia, City of Melbourne, Film Festivals Australia, City of Sydney. He has also received funding, or contributed to projects that have benefited from funding, for creative work as a producer and engineer from NZ on Air and APRA AMCOS.

    Jesse Austin-Stewart has completed commissioned research for NZ On Air and participated in focus groups for Manatu Taonga Ministry for Culture and Heritage. He has received competitive funding from Creative New Zealand, NZ On Air, Manatu Taonga Ministry for Culture & Hertiage, and the NZ Music Commission. He is a writer member of APRA AMCOS and a member of the Composer's Association of New Zealand and Recorded Music NZ

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     29 May: Two people are injured - one seriously - following a crash on Dunedin's Southern Motorway
     29 May: More details around funding for Wellington Hospital have been unveiled
     29 May: The average Auckland household will face a 324 dollar increase in rates and water bills from July
     29 May: A pedestrian who was seriously injured being struck by a car last week in Christchurch, has died
     28 May: Auckland Police have arrested a man in connection with a violent assault in Papatoetoe this month
     28 May: Girls with painful periods are twice as likely as their peers to have symptoms of anxiety or depression
     28 May: Wellington's Mayor has hit back at disparaging comments from the Prime Minister today about the city's Council
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A timely return for the Crusaders ahead of the Super Rugby Pacific playoffs More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Fonterra's reporting a strong rise in profit, while warning of more global uncertainty on the horizon More...



     Today's News

    Living & Travel:
    ‘Killing is part of their life’: the men raised on violence who are both perpetrators and victims as South Sudan faces return to civil war 10:07

    Law and Order:
    'The loneliest road': NT police officer's mother still searching for answers five years after her death 10:07

    Dunedin:
    Two people are injured - one seriously - following a crash on Dunedin's Southern Motorway 10:07

    Entertainment:
    Elvira, Mistress of the Dark has offered Meghan, Duchess of Sussex some "beauty advice" 9:50

    Business:
    Fonterra's reporting a strong rise in profit, while warning of more global uncertainty on the horizon 9:27

    Entertainment:
    Tom Daley had a key to a classroom to escape brutal school bullying 9:20

    Rugby League:
    Queensland captain Daly Cherry-Evans insists he has more to give in the State of Origin league arena, despite his side's 18-6 opening loss to New South Wales in Brisbane 9:07

    Entertainment:
    Machine Gun Kelly left the American Music Awards early because his daughter has a fever 8:50

    Business:
    Christopher Luxon remains hopeful the latest cut in the OCR isn't the last 8:27

    Entertainment:
    Miriam Margolyes has revealed she doesn't have "long to live" after a major heart operation 8:20


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd