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Providing satellite and online radio services to more than a million listeners nationwide and to a larger audience worldwide, SiriusXM is the home to hundreds of radio shows, including The Howard Stern Show, Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb's The TODAY Show, among many others. -
Drake SiriusXM Show at Apollo Theater: Here’s How to Win FREE Tickets
Drake announced a special concert at the Apollo Theater in collaboration with SiriusXM; here's how fans could secure free tickets! #Drake #SiriusXM -
Måneskin Private Concert 2022: How to Win Limited Tickets + NYC Trip
Måneskin will be performing at a private concert in New York City this July and fans will have a chance to win tickets. #Måneskin #Concert -
Paul McCartney in Quarantine Talk, Calls Out Wet Markets in China
Paul McCartney was Howard Stern's guest on his morning show and discussed life in quarantine and Chinese wet markets. -
DJ Taylor Swift Entertains Fans, Shares Life in Quarantine
Taylor Swift kicked-off “Hits 1 n chill”, Home DJ series last April 3. -
Diplo To Launch Own SiriusXM Station ‘Diplo’s Revolution’
Diplo just announced the launch date for his SiriusXM station 'Diplo's Revolution.' A live event in Miami Beach, Florida will be held on March 22 at 9 p.m. EST. -
SiriusXM Surpasses 30 Million Subscribers With Q1 Growth
2015 was SiriusXM's biggest year for subscriber growth since 2007. -
Diplo and Skrillex Ring in 2016 With New Jack Ü Mix [LISTEN]
Jack Ü, the electronic dance production superduo consisting of Diplo and Skrillex, dropped an exclusive Guest Room mix for SiriusXM to ring in the New Year. -
Why Pandora is Paying $90 Million to Record Labels Over Pre-1972 Recordings
Think of all the great music recorded before 1972. It includes some of the most legendary artists ever from The Beatles to Jimi Hendrix. A lot of that music has been trapped in the world of pre-1972 recordings, which is a segment of copyright law that allowed Pandora to skirt payment to rights holders for years, until this week when a settlement was reached with the company to pay labels $90 million. -
Subscribers Have a Chance to Win Tickets to the Three Shows
For deadheads around the world who are unable to attend the Grateful Dead's "Fare The Well" concerts, SiriusXM's exclusive Grateful Dead station, Channel 23, will broadcast the 50th anniversary and final concerts from Chicago's Soldier Field this Fourth of July weekend. -
SiriusXM's Challenge Over Pre-'72 Music to Be Reviewed by Appeals Court
The courts are taking heed of SiriusXM's warning that it may pull all pre-1972 music from its airwaves. According to 'The Hollywood Reporter,' the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals granted a petition for review of recent lawsuits filed against the satellite radio giant. -
Trace Adkins SiriusXM Show 'Throwback Thirty' Launches This Month on Y2Kountry
Trace Adkins is the next music star to get a SiriusXM show. The weekly "Throwback Thirty" show launches tomorrow, March 15, on Y2Kountry and will have the singer recapping Billboard's Top 30 country songs. In addition to contemporary hits, Adkins will also review tunes from different years of the new millennium, starting with 2000 tomorrow. -
SiriusXM Posts Big Gains in 2014 Thanks in Large Part to Increased Automobile Sales; What's Next for Satellite?
Things are looking good for satellite radio provider SiriusXM according to the 2014 report given by the company on February 4. The company now has a record-high 27.3 million subscribers, which led to a 10 percent revenue increase during 2014, totaling $4.18 billion, while net income rose 31 percent to $493 million and free cash flow rose 25 percent to $1.16 billion. -
Lawsuit Against Google, Sony, Rdio, Beats Electronics and More May End Pre-1972 Music Streaming and Internet Radio
Music streaming controversy has gotten uglier as a lawsuits have been filed against Google, Sony Entertainment, Rdio, Songza, Apple's Beats Electronics and more on behalf of the music group that owns the catalogues of the Flying Burrito Brothers, Hot Tuna and Purple Sage. The results of the collective legal push could result in thousands of songs written prior to 1972 disappearing from the internet. -
Pandora Cries 1st Amendment in Copyright Suit with The Turtles
Pandora is continuing its fight against The Turtles and all music artists recorded before 1972. Mark Volmer and Howard Kalen, aka Flo & Eddie, filed suit against the streaming music service in September after their successful lawsuit against SiriusXM. Members of The Turtles want compensation, but Pandora in a recent motion said the band is infringing on the service's First Amendment rights to play the group's music, "Billboard" reports. The issue is that the United States did not have a master recordings copyright law until 1972, so everything recorded before that year has been played on Pandora and SiriusXM without compensation for the artists. Volmer and Kalen decided to try the case at the state level, which worked after a judge in California ruled that the satellite radio provider had to pay up. That is the same judge hearing the Pandora case — the service is hoping to receive a change of venue. The pair also secured a win in November in a New York courtroom. Pandora is now crying First Amendment.
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