I'd recommend Amazon.com. They have a nice mp3 store, all DRM free, so can be played on any music player. You can buy full albums or individual songs. Note that there are a few albums they don't let you purchase an individual track, but they are in the minority.
Napster has a pay per song service.
Angels and Airwaves music can be downloaded from pay per song or pay per album sites. Sometimes free downloads can be included when a paid subscription is initiated.
I've read on several review sites that when you download, at least on Itunes and CDBaby ... that they make roughly .64-.65 per song ... about $6-$7 per album.
Yes, buy it. BMG and other music industry groups have websites that you can go to that will allow you to pay for them. If it's over $1 per song, then just buy them from iTunes on the Apple site.
Yahoo Plus....Its 20 dollars but no per-track fee and they are compatible with iTunes
If you want to download at Amazon Music for offline listening, you can get an Amazon Music subscription. Amazon Prime membership fees are: $12.99 per month (plus taxes), $119 per year (plus taxes), Prime Video membership is $8.99 per month (plus taxes). Prime members can join Amazon Music Unlimited for only $7.99/month for a monthly subscription or $79/year for an annual subscription. Non-Prime customers pay $9.99/month. If you'd like to download content out of Amazon Music, you need to use a third-party tool such as Macsome Amazon Music Downloader. It can help you download Amazon music to MP3 or other formats on your computer, so that you can transfer Amazon music files to any devices without Amazon Music app.
There are many music download sites on the Internet. However, not all of the site are legal and respect copyright law. One of the most popular legal sites is iTunes which allows users to pay a small fee per song.
The account is free.
Angels and Airwaves music can be downloaded from pay per song or pay per album sites. Sometimes free downloads can be included when a paid subscription is initiated.
One can download music from Tanzania in a variety of places, such as Amazon and iTunes, both of which have a pay-per-song payment structure. One can also use a YouTube to MP3 converter to download songs directly from YouTube videos.
I bought the collection at 6 cents per song. [Update] Now it's available at 1 cent per song :( at the site mentioned in the Sources and related links below. .
I've read on several review sites that when you download, at least on Itunes and CDBaby ... that they make roughly .64-.65 per song ... about $6-$7 per album.
Yes, buy it. BMG and other music industry groups have websites that you can go to that will allow you to pay for them. If it's over $1 per song, then just buy them from iTunes on the Apple site.
Yahoo Plus....Its 20 dollars but no per-track fee and they are compatible with iTunes
Well first things first, limewire is illegal. The only way to download songs to your iPod is throgh buying the tune online or from a store. Itunes uses a scanner to detect if it was legally purchased, if it isn't you will not be able to put the song on there. I suggest you stop downloading songs off Limewire because if you have so many songs and you get caught the average fee per song you illegally downloaded is $1,000 and the cost of the song. Not the best thing in the world buddy.
1GB per month = 1,024MB per month / 2 MB per 1 song = 512 Songs per month
If you want to download at Amazon Music for offline listening, you can get an Amazon Music subscription. Amazon Prime membership fees are: $12.99 per month (plus taxes), $119 per year (plus taxes), Prime Video membership is $8.99 per month (plus taxes). Prime members can join Amazon Music Unlimited for only $7.99/month for a monthly subscription or $79/year for an annual subscription. Non-Prime customers pay $9.99/month. If you'd like to download content out of Amazon Music, you need to use a third-party tool such as Macsome Amazon Music Downloader. It can help you download Amazon music to MP3 or other formats on your computer, so that you can transfer Amazon music files to any devices without Amazon Music app.
This is a very tricky question. It depends on the website in question and whether not they have been authorized by the RIAA to do business. To put it simply, when a music site launches they are supposed to ask the RIAA if they can do business, then they purchase licenses or rights to make the songs available for purchase. A lifetime membership fee music download site would probably not make the RIAA very happy because say you pay $1 or $1,000, over the LIFE of the membership, the profit the RIAA and its labels make per song would probably be very, very, little.