By Michael Driscoll 

How much is one play of a song really worth?

Ever since streaming service Spotify AB put a number on that--around seven-tenths of a penny--the music industry has debated whether the figure is fair.

A look at royalties in the digital age shows that, while Spotify's compensation falls short when compared with income from compact-disc spins, the company outperforms when it comes to passing along revenue more broadly. Perhaps more importantly, an inspection of the numbers highlights how streaming's impact on piracy could eventually steer more cash to everyone.

"The reality is, whether you like it or not, people are moving from buying to streaming," says Martin Goldschmidt, co-founder of Cooking Vinyl, a British label that is home to Billy Bragg, the Prodigy, Amanda Palmer and other acts. "It doesn't matter whether I like it or I want them to. It's the real world."

Spotify is among a host of companies--including Pandora Media Inc. and Apple Inc.'s Beats Music--that stream music to listeners via the Internet. Spotify offers subscribers access to a vast catalog of music, playable on demand, for a monthly fee, currently $9.99. (It also has a free, ad-supported version.)

At first blush, Spotify's piddling payouts per play might seem discouraging to those aspiring to a record deal--more so when one considers that labels and publishers often take a sizable cut of what Spotify passes along. While royalty arrangements vary widely from label to label and artist to artist, in a typical deal, the amount making it back to the musician might only be about 0.15 cent for each song streamed, say people familiar with how royalties break down.

Compare that with more-conventional compensation: A compact-disc retailing for $15 and featuring 10 original songs might return about $1.50 to the writer and performer, or 15 cents a song. But a CD is played more than once, of course. Played twice, the artist has gotten 7.5 cents per song listen. Played 15 times, one cent. In this model, the CD would need to be played 100 times before the payout per play, per song, would equal what the artist receives from a Spotify stream. Even for a favorite tune, 100 spins seems a high bar.

But a song-to-song comparison may be the wrong way to go about it in the age of streaming, when users are buying a single listen at a given moment rather than the track itself. Traditional purchasers of a song file or physical recording were paying a premium for that ownership and the ability to cue up a track anywhere at any time--on infinite repeat if desired. Spotify isn't competing on those terms.

Instead, Spotify offers isolated access, and its system of charging for that access looks more favorable when viewed from a revenue standpoint. The streaming company says it keeps about 30% of the cash it brings in. That is comparable to the percentage Apple Inc. keeps from cash generated by downloads from its iTunes Store, the people familiar with royalties say. The typical retailer might keep about 40% of the revenue collected on a $15 CD, these people say, making Spotify's system appear generous by comparison.

Critics of Spotify's compensation have homed in on the 0.6-to-0.84 cent the streaming service said is a reasonable estimate of what it pays per play. (The company actually has a formula that relies on ever-changing variables for getting at that figure.) But Spotify has released another number worth noting: $2 billion. That's the amount the company late last year said it had sent to rights holders globally since its inception in 2008.

Cooking Vinyl's Mr. Goldschmidt says those focusing on the tiny payments artists receive are missing the bigger picture: "The more interesting thing is the fact that I'm earning more money."

And there's a not-insignificant bonus: Streaming services that offer easy, paid access to music have proven an effective way to draw in listeners who might otherwise choose illegal downloads, Mr. Goldschmidt said. He calls Spotify "the best thing the industry has ever done to fight piracy."

"Music is consumed now more than it ever has been on the planet, but most people don't pay for it" or pay "very, very little," he says. "What Spotify is doing is getting people to pay for it."

Willard Ahdritz, who founded Kobalt Music Group Ltd. in 2000 to help artists manage digital royalties, pointed to recent reports highlighting a decline in piracy in parts of Europe where streaming has flourished as an example of what could be in store elsewhere. "Spotify has killed the illegal market in Scandinavia, and the market is growing from it," he says. "There's a lot of cash coming out."

Streaming revenue in the U.S. was $1.9 billion in 2014, according to the Recording Industry Association of America. That was nearly triple 2011's figure. Industry revenue broadly was flat over that period, suggesting dollars once spent elsewhere were directed toward streaming.

The question now is: Can Spotify and other streaming firms build off those levels in a meaningful way?

Sachin Doshi, Spotify's vice president of content and distribution, said he thinks the company has found a formula for growth that "will help bring the industry to its peak and beyond."

It has a way to go: U.S. recording-industry revenue topped out at $14.6 billion in 1999. In 2014, it was $7 billion. Complaints about Spotify's payouts might just as well be directed at that dropoff. It's hard to pay musicians with money that isn't there.

"A lot of artists think the world owes them a living," says Mr. Goldschmidt. "And it doesn't."

Write to Michael Driscoll at michael.driscoll@wsj.com

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