Yeah you can absolutely release it on the major marketplaces. You never give up your ownership, it’s actually solidified on the blockchain as an NFT. Spotify or Apple Music do not dictate that sort of thing. The whole point of NFTs is ownership rights. We have a collection for artists to mint and hold a creators copyright, which represents your creative ownership over the song. Similar to if you were to ‘poor man’s copyright’ your song which is just basically making a copy on a CD or USB drive and mailing it to yourself and not opening it… Fun fact, I have done this on cassettes… lol… The Creator copyright will be in place of this. You will not sell this NFT.
We also have a royalty free arts collection where you can sell the commercial use rights say for DJs or video content creators or sync licensers. I would sell this for a pretty penny as they will have the right to use it in their works, but still do not have full creator rights.
Then there are the private rights stuff that the OpenTunes collection is for. This is for the stuff you want to make into rare art. Like I am making some cool visualizer videos and letting those be a one of a kind edition and selling those as an NFT.
Think of the true purpose of an NFT as certificate of ownership. Not just a silly jpeg image, lol…
RE: What is Your End Game? More Stuff or More Time?