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What Is Music Distribution and How Does It Work

Last updated: March 2026 · Digitalent Music

Music distribution is the process of getting recorded music from the artist to the listener. It is the bridge between creation and consumption -- the mechanism that takes a finished recording and makes it available to the public through physical stores, digital platforms, or both. Without distribution, even the most brilliant recording would remain unheard outside the artist's immediate circle.

A Brief History of Music Distribution

The Physical Era

For most of the 20th century, music distribution was entirely physical. Record labels manufactured vinyl records, cassette tapes, and later compact discs, then shipped them to retail stores through a network of wholesalers and distributors. This was an expensive, complex operation that required significant capital investment in manufacturing, warehousing, and logistics.

The physical distribution chain typically looked like this: the artist recorded music at a studio, the label manufactured the product, a physical distributor warehoused and shipped the product to retail stores, and the consumer purchased it at the store. Each link in this chain took a percentage of the retail price.

The Digital Revolution

The launch of the iTunes Store in 2003 began the shift toward digital distribution. For the first time, consumers could legally purchase individual songs as digital downloads. The rise of streaming platforms -- Spotify launched in 2008, Apple Music in 2015 -- completed the transformation. Today, streaming accounts for the vast majority of recorded music revenue globally.

How Digital Distribution Works Today

Modern digital music distribution follows a streamlined process:

  1. The artist creates the music: Recording, mixing, mastering, artwork, and metadata preparation.
  2. Upload to a distributor: Audio files, artwork, and metadata are uploaded. The distributor assigns ISRC codes and UPC barcodes if needed.
  3. Distributor delivers to platforms: The complete package is sent to Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, Deezer, Tidal, and dozens more.
  4. Platforms make music available: Each platform processes the delivery and makes it available to listeners within days to two weeks.
  5. Revenue flows back: Platforms calculate royalties, pay the distributor, and the distributor pays the artist.

The Role of Aggregators and Distributors

In the digital era, these terms are often used interchangeably:

How Music Gets to Streaming Platforms

Distributors have technical integrations with each platform -- essentially pipelines through which music and metadata are delivered electronically. When you upload a release, they format the delivery per each platform's specifications. Platforms validate the delivery, check for technical issues and content policy compliance, then process it into their catalog.

Delivery times vary: Spotify processes within a few days, Apple Music may take slightly longer, some smaller platforms up to two weeks. This is why distributors recommend uploading 2-4 weeks before your intended release date.

Distribution Agreements

Key elements to understand in any distribution agreement:

Why Independent Artists Need Distribution

You cannot upload music directly to Spotify, Apple Music, or most major platforms as an individual. A distributor provides:

Choosing the Right Distributor

Key Takeaways