A few clues?
Maybe EMI & Apple Corps are working behind the scenes, and dont want to create free publicity for BlueBeat. However, we should look at the site itself. The library is substantial, although only a fraction of the I-Tunes library. Streaming sound delivery is high quality, and to my ear the downloads sound very good on my I-Pod. Navigating the site is easy and intuitive, suggesting that the designers are very skilled. The site has a help forum and from reading some of the dialogue the personnel at BlueBeat are earnest and helpful. The site offers unheard-of streaming of entire tracks, not just 30-second samples. Besides that, there is a raft of real information about the artists, their music, and their genres. Bottom line about the site: effort is too large and too genuine to not be intended for the long haul, which means legit. And legally (Im not an attorney) there are some clues
the file information for BlueBeat downloads shows copyright 2009 BlueBeat.com. The web site Terms of Use is a formidable document that seems to say, in the usual boilerplate style, that We are legal, so dont try to pull anything on us. A comment on a MacWorld forum that appears to come from someone at BlueBeat states (quote) Our mp3s are fully-licensed audio-visual works and BlueBeat.com pays all applicable royalties ... If that is indeed the case, and if my other observations carry any weight, then my impression is that BlueBeat is legal.