Pre-looaded music players play catch-up

18th April 2019
Pre-looaded music players play catch-up

Images: Middle: pre loaded music players:  Saregama Carvaan ( left) and Acoosta Uno
Top and bottom: The initial positioning of Saregama's Carvaan digital audio player as a device for the young  (top) was swiftly repositioned   as a gift option for the aged, from their children ( bottom)
April 18 2019: The proliferation of unbranded "bhakti boxes" in the unorganised  electronics bazaar, has moved the biggest  Indian copyright owner of recorded music to compete aggressively.. even as others offer an international repertoire. 
By Anand Parthasarathy
Sometimes, "if you can't fight 'em, join 'em" can seem like a sensible solution. This seems to have happened in the business of  pre-loaded  music boxes in India. Consider the situation about 2 years ago:
A creeping phenomenon could be seen  all over India in the retail electronics cluster of major cities: the  sale of   mostly unbranded portable  music players  pre-loaded with bhakti music:  Ganesha aarthis,  Sri Ram bhajans, Venkateswara suprabhatham, Hanuman chalisa....They came with a built-in loud speaker, with some 2-3 hours of tracks ( all lifted from popular Music CDs) recorded on an SD or micro SD card  sealed inside the unit. Such bhakthi boxes  cost anywhere from Rs 300 to Rs 2000, depending on how many audio tracks they offered. They sold in large numbers and trickled through retailers to neighborhood shops, even kiosks -- especially around places of worship all over India. In lakhs of middle class homes, such boxes were switched on at dawn to give families a spiritual uplift  for the day.  No questions asked or answered about royalties and copyright.
RPG group-owned, Saregama, inheritors of the HMV / EMI  label and arguably the   largest  copyright owners of Indian music  in the country, took almost a year to react to this  trend. Their response was to fight fire with fire: In late 2017, they launched their own pre-loaded digital audio player -- Carvaan -- a decidedly retro-designed  device that looked like a  1970s   "two in one". Into the player Saregama crammed some 5000  Hindi songs from the Golden Age of "Binaca Geet Mala" -- complete with  Ameen Sayani's  matchless  commentary -- and classified by artiste and theme. You could also plug in a USB stick of  one's own music. At Rs 6390 it was   much pricier than the unbranded competitors  and offered a quite different repertoire. It was slow to take off -- till RPG cannily changed its positioning. The imagery with the initial launch suggested that young people and families would enjoy Carvaan. They were wrong. Many of the targeted  buyers -- millennials  -- were born into the post-Radio Ceylon-Binaca/Cibaca Geet Mala era. They  had no nostalgia for gathering around the radio at 8 pm, every Wednesday.  But their parents  had. So Carvaan marketing was swiftly changed to suggest that the product  made a great gift for one's parents.  The product took off.
A Premium model of Carvaan priced  Rs 7390,  added an app which allowed owners to search for and play a particular track --  setting right a drawback in the first version which was more like a juke box.
Then RPG discovered  another fact of musical life in India (what took them so long?) Especially  for the golden oldies among customers, musical taste was very localized. Not every one liked  Hindi cinema songs..but they wanted their own music:  Bengali, Tamil, Punjabi.  This led RPG to roll out a whole series of language or genre-specific  mini   Carvaan players,  priced at Rs 2490, each with some 350-400 tracks:  Gurbani, Telugu, Hindi, MS Subbalakshmi, or just plain bhakti. The device trend had come full circle  and  ironically RPG was  offering players  with only devotional songs,  taking the pirate manufacturers at their original game -- and with aggressive pricing
Sales  zoomed.  In some  15 months, over  10 lakh Caravaans were sold, accounting for some 40 percent of Saregama's  total  business, with  outlets in over  20 metros  adding to online direct and e-commerce sales.
International Edge
Meanwhile, what about  those customers whose musical tastes extended to other genres of music  from contemporary  Indipop to bhajans and ghazals; and beyond  Indian to  international pop and country/western, from rock to reggae?
As if in answer to this need, Mumbai-based  Acoosta Innovations  has launched  the Acoosta Uno  HiFi music system -- a Bluetooth-enabled   2000 watts PMPO speaker cum FM radio player with one difference:  Its chunky 2.5 kg  tabletop   body  holds some 14,000 songs across  multiple Indian and international genres  and  1000-plus artistes.  The repertoire ranges from  Sunidhi Chauhaan  and Sonu Nigam to  Jagjit Singh and Justin Timberlake... Eric Clapton and  Pink Floyd,  Shakira  and  Lata Mangeshkar, all the tracks are sourced from Sony Digital Audio Disk Corporation which means they are --  especially the western  tracks --  from the Sony Music label.   Initially selling for Rs 12,000 Acoosta Uno is now available for Rs 8650 at Amazon.. another  instance of aggressive marketing. It  might be rated as good value  especially as the player  is Bluetooth-enabled to sync another music player or phone and come with a free Karaoke mike.
Desi or  global,  pop or classical,  pre loaded  music players  have created a new  disruptive niche in India and the segment will soon see further  variants. Saregama is set to launch CarvaanGo, a phone-sized  preloaded device with Bluetooth connectivity and earphones. And will we see  international  take-offs with similar packet-sized  form factors?   Too early to tell. But one thing is clear: what started as a very Indian urge to  wake up to devotional  music has morphed into a new class of  players which come with their own inbuilt music and say: Meri Awaaz suno.