I told Tidal why they'd fail almost two years ago. I was invited into the closed beta.  Back then, they had a promise of all these great artists and great fidelity for only $9.99 a month.  The problem?  If you wanted to sample those great artists and great fidelity, you needed to give them a credit card. Spotify doesn't do that.  Last.fm doesn't do that.  Pandora doesn't do that.  iTunes Radio doesn't do that.  NOBODY does that.  Oh, and sure - they won't charge you for a month.  And sure - Netflix does that.  But Netflix doesn't compete with anybody but Hulu, and Hulu stole marketshare from Netflix by letting you know exactly what you got if you paid $8 a month for Hulu Plus.   I'm one of those guys that likes fidelity, and I would have liked to have tested it.  I had a pretty good idea that they have nothing from anyone I want to hear; seeing Nicki Minaj on stage doesn't change that notion.  So maybe it's the distance of knowing I'm triple-not interested in Tidal, but as far as I can tell, their clientele are those in the Venn overlap of the following four circles:  - Those that listen to stuff you can hear on the radio whenever you want  - Those that want to pay extra to hear it in high fidelity  - Those that are willing to give over a credit card number to see if it's worth it  - Those that aren't getting all they need from Pandora, Spotify and iTunes Radio I'm pretty sure that's a tiny little surface.  I certainly wouldn't want to build a business off of it.    Of course, that was before Jay-Z bought it for $56m.   I dunno.  I'm tempted to say "there's a sucker born every minute".  Neil Young, after all, has already made the world yawn with his magic high resolution service.