Streaming has been rapidly growing and offering a new source of revenue for the long-beleaguered music business, which has tried to steer fans to subscription audio sites and away from video behemoth YouTube.
Analytical firm BuzzAngle Music, in a mid-year report, reported 114 billion audio streams on sites such as Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal and Rhapsody in the first six months of the year.
The number topped the 95 billion video streams on YouTube, Dailymotion and other sites, marking the first period in which audio dominated, it said.
Streaming overall expanded by 58 percent in the United States, the world's largest music market, keeping up a breakneck rate of growth, it said.
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The shift toward audio streaming is particularly striking as YouTube alone has more than one billion users around the world.
Spotify, the largest streaming company, said it had 89 million active monthly users worldwide as of the end of 2015, of whom 28 million were paying for subscriptions.
While some artists criticize Spotify in particular for its compensation level, the music industry says it earns far less from video sites.
Record labels have been campaigning to change US and European laws that protect video companies if users upload copyrighted material.
YouTube's owner Google rejects the criticism, saying it also has licensing agreements with record labels and checks for copyright through its Content ID technology.
The company has started its own YouTube Music streaming site for both video and audio as well as the subscription-tier YouTube Red video service.