Imagine: Getting Beatles Songs on iTunes

One of the last holdouts of the digital music age might soon be for sale online.

ByABC News
January 8, 2009, 12:29 AM

Sept. 5, 2007— -- The Rolling Stones. The Jackson Five. Bruce Springsteen. You name a band and it probably has its music for sale online.

Except, that is, the Beatles.

The best-selling band of all time is noticeably absent from the digital realm. But that could change soon.Rumors have long surrounded some type of deal between the Beatles and an online retailer such as iTunes. But no deal has materialized.

With Apple again making a big product announcement today, many industry watchers are once again waiting -- some would say eagerly -- for an iTunes-Beatles deal.

Today's announcement didn't included the Beatles -- although John Lennon once appeared on screen -- but such a deal is probably not too far off, say those who follow such things.

"The Beatles are really the holy grail for digital music, said Aram Sinnreich, a professor at New York University's department of media culture and communications and managing partner of Radar Research LLC, a media consulting firm. "They have not been available legally from any digital music service to date. Once they are, I think it confers the sense that digital music has finally arrived in the mainstream."

A Beatles deal would mean millions of dollars, with the group having sold 170 million albums in the United States, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

And don't think that it's just baby boomers who bought LPs decades ago.

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOS OF BEATLES ALBUMS

In the last 16 years alone, the Beatles have sold 54.9 million albums in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan, which has tracked record sales since 1991. In that time-period -- long after the band broke up -- the Beatles were the second-best selling artists in the country, after Garth Brooks.

"There's no question that there is a massive demand for the Beatles through a digital channel," Sinnreich said, "not only from baby boomers, who would replace the CDs they used to replace their LPs, but also from today's college students, who demonstrate continued interest in the band despite the fact that it's their grandparents' music."