The standard Nokia Music Store features are available for the Indian store, including the on-device mobile client for over-the-air downloads and PC client (Nokia Music) for downloads to the PC. Purchased tracks may be played back on the phone or via the PC and can be synced between the two, regardless of how they were downloaded.
The Nokia Music Store was previously available in 'soft launch' mode, with track purchase only available via vouchers. Vouchers were (and will be) available in the sales box of selected handsets (Nseries, Eseries and XpressMusic).
You can follow Nokia Music India on Twitter here.
Homepage of Nokia Music Store India, note the dominance of local music artists.
Further details from the conference keynote
At the Music Connects conference, Nokia's Head of Global Music, Elizabeth Schimel, talked about the progression of Nokia's music strategy: The Nokia Music Store is available in over 20 countries, 9 of which have the Comes with Music offering, and is continuing to roll out at a rapid pace. This represents the fastest ever roll out for a digital music service. While the Nokia Music service is global, being local is also very important to Nokia. In each country, Nokia hires local experts who understand local music tastes and trends, to help them get local music into the store and optimise the appeal of the Nokia Music Store for each individual country.
Schimel continued by noting that Nokia believed they 'were crossing an important threshold in India', because the company 'has unique characteristics in India because of their technology and the strength of the Nokia brand'. Nokia is the number one trusted brand in India and Nokia hold a dominant market share in the country. The combination of this, together with the reach of Nokia's Indian distribution channel and the breadth of the music catalog, will come together to 'create value for the music industry'.
Schimel also shared some interesting figures for the Comes with Music service: Comes with Music acts a liberating force around the discovery of new music. Pay-as-you-go customers download, on average, from three different genres; Comes with Music customers, on average, download from 8 different genres, and have much deeper use of the back catalog. Comes with Music customers typically use their mobile phone as their primary device for listening to and maintaining their music collection and 35% of their downloads happen over the air.
Schimel concluded by noting that 'consumer engagement around the content they love is the future of our business'. That's a rallying cry that applies right across Nokia's push into software and services.