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In the US, Christian music and recession pop are making a comeba ck In the U.S., streaming accounts for 92% of all music consumption.
Discrimination case claims that noncommercial religious broadcasters are paying far more than fellow stations to cover royalties for music played online.
Once largely confined to insular networks, contemporary Christian music is having a breakthrough moment on the pop charts with artists like Brandon Lake and Forrest Frank.
In 2025, those numbers have dropped to 4.6% and 10.3%. In the US, Christian music and recession pop are making a comeba ck In the U.S., streaming accounts for 92% of all music consumption.
In the US, Christian music and recession pop are making a comeba ck In the U.S., streaming accounts for 92% of all music consumption.
‘Recession pop’ and new Christian music surge in the US as streaming growth slows R&B/hip-hop remains the most popular genre in terms of on-demand audio streaming volume, followed by rock, pop ...