Music industry transformation is happening faster than expected, with Avalanche leading the charge.



Recently, a major sports personality dropped serious cash—$11,001—to own an upcoming album from an emerging artist on a blockchain-powered music platform. That wasn't a casual purchase; it signaled something bigger: celebrity validation of Web3's role in artist support.

But here's the thing—he wasn't alone. Fans are increasingly using blockchain platforms to directly fund and own pieces of music they believe in. No middlemen. No waiting for record label approval. Just creators and supporters connecting through Avalanche's infrastructure.

This is how the music industry rebuilds itself. Not through gatekeepers, but through actual fans willing to bet on talent.
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TokenToastervip
· 4h ago
Wow, this is what music should really be like. Fans directly hold the right to speak.
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SerNgmivip
· 01-08 02:12
Whoa 11001, buying an album—does this guy really believe in Web3 or is he just throwing money to cut the leeks...
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BugBountyHuntervip
· 01-07 20:54
This is true decentralization; the days of record companies are coming to an end.
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GweiTooHighvip
· 01-07 20:51
Damn, finally someone is directly throwing money to independent musicians. This is true faith recharge. Interesting, bypassing the old tired logic of record companies... but how long can this last? Decentralized listening sounds great, but the problem is most people can't tell what truly good music is. Avalanche's marketing this time was indeed well executed, but the industry-changing force isn't necessarily blockchain. Don't trust intermediaries, trust fans—it's just a different way of saying the same thing. What does 11,000 yuan mean to a star? It mainly depends on whether ordinary fans are willing to genuinely spend real money. Reconstructing the music industry? Let's see if ordinary people can even listen first. So now listening to music still requires wallet operation skills—aren't we just raising the entry barrier in disguise?
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ContractSurrendervip
· 01-07 20:47
Damn, this is the real music revolution. Finally, someone dares to spend money to make it happen. --- Wait, this number $11001... is a bit magical haha. --- It sounds good, but the key question is how many people would really spend that much money on unfamiliar musicians. --- Avalanche is indeed doing real work this time, unlike some chains that only boast every day. --- I like the concept of directly funding artists. Done and dusted.
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SchrodingersPapervip
· 01-07 20:37
Whoa, $11,001 to buy an album? Is this guy serious or just a marketing stunt... But on the other hand, if this really blows up, I gotta get on board.
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