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Massive Attack's New Music Won't Be On Spotify
Music

Massive Attack’s New Music Won’t Be On Spotify

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Massive Attack have new music on the way in 2026, but it won’t be available on Spotify. “From next year, we will release a cache of work created in the recent past,” the group wrote on Instagram. “Tracks will be available physically and digitally via a new label, with a Spotify exception.”

Along with many other artists, Massive Attack pulled their music from the DSP earlier this year in protest of CEO Daniel Ek’s ties to the military tech company Helsing.

There was no further elaboration in reference to a new label; Massive Attack recorded for Virgin from their 1991 debut, Blue Lines, through their most recent studio album, 2010’s Heligoland, but their only new music since then was a self-released 2020 EP, Eutopia, which is not available on streaming services.

Beyond fresh tunes, Massive Attack will wind down their 2025 roadwork tonight (Nov. 13) in São Paulo in conjunction with the COP30 International Climate Change Summit in nearby Belém. The group has long been at the forefront of advocating for reducing carbon emissions related to the live music industry.

Massive Attack will also perform next summer at the Primavera festivals in Barcelona and Porto. Last October, the group scrapped their planned first U.S. tour since 2019 less than a week in advance due to “unforeseen circumstances.”

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Spotify To Launch Music Videos In U.S. And Canada In Coming Weeks
TV & Streaming

Spotify To Launch Music Videos In U.S. And Canada In Coming Weeks

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Giant music streamer Spotify, which in January started rolling out music videos in beta in 98 markets outside the U.S. and Canada, will be introducing them Stateside in the coming weeks, a spokesperson confirmed to Deadline.

No specific date or details were provided for the move, which will set Spotify as a rival to YouTube in the space. As in other markets, they will be available for premium subscribers.

The tipoff came in the announcement of new platform Spotify and the National Music Publishers’ Association unveiled on Tuesday — specifically a new “Opt-In Portal” for NMPA members to enter into a direct license agreement for expanded audiovisual rights in the U.S. A Spotify press post said the new agreements will mean higher royalty payouts for independent music publishers and songwriters, and, in exchange Spotify will receive new rights to build video features “that better connect artists and fans.” 

“This new partnership with the NMPA will increase revenue for songwriters and independent publishers who are the heart of the industry,” said Spotify’s Co-President and Chief Business Officer, Alex Norström. “We look forward to continuing to work with the NMPA to create new value and opportunities for their members.”

“We are pleased that this deal offers indie publishers the chance to enter into direct deals with Spotify in regard to audiovisual streaming functionality on the platform alongside the recently announced larger publishing companies,” added David Israelite, president and CEO, NMPA. “This new income stream reflects the growing value of songs as digital platforms offer new capabilities to consumers.” 

The NMPA Opt-In Portal was open to eligible publishers starting November 11 with onboarding continuing through December 19.

Variety was first to report the news.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Spotify, Max, Streaming Services Face Backlash for Anti-Immigrant Ads
Music

Spotify, Max, Streaming Services Face Backlash for Anti-Immigrant Ads

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

If a dystopic voice asking you “to fulfill your mission” of rounding up undocumented immigrants has snuck its way onto your streaming airwaves, you’re far from the only one.

In the last two months, online users have reported seeing and hearing an increased amount of recruitment advertising from the Department of Homeland Security on streaming services such as Pandora, Spotify, and Max — and even during September’s MTV VMAs.

The new advertising push, which has faced online backlash, has followed the Trump administration’s investment of $30 billion to hire at least 10,000 more deportation officers by the end of the year, according to The Associated Press. “You took an oath to protect and serve, to keep your family, your city, safe,” the narrator says in some advertisements targeting local police officers. “But in sanctuary cities, you’re ordered to stand down while dangerous illegals walk free.”

In mid-October, specifically, music listeners on Spotify’s ad-supported free plan reported hearing similar advertising on the platform, with some choosing to end their membership due to the ads. When reached for comment, a rep for Spotify told Rolling Stone that the DHS commercials were part of a “broad campaign” from the government agency and that it did not violate any advertising policies on the platform.

But the recruitment ads have been running on numerous streaming platforms, with fans flagging concerns with the ads on Hulu, Max, YouTube, and Pandora, as early as April.

According to new data from Equis acquired by Rolling Stone, DHS spent a combined $2.8 million on English and Spanish-language ads on Meta’s Facebook and Instagram since March 1, and another half a million on ICE recruitment ads on the platform since August.

On Google and YouTube, DHS spent nearly $3 million on specifically Spanish-language advertising aimed at promoting self-deportation. While Equis is unable to track data for ad spends on Spotify, Pandora, and other platforms, an industry source told Rolling Stone that Spotify had received a mere $74,000 from DHS to run their advertisements. That figure represents less than three percent of what the government spent on Google and Meta.

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The new data shared on Nov. 11 follows advertisement tracking information from Equis and Priorities USA that confirmed that the Trump administration had spent upwards of $10 million on ad spending for DHS and ICE.

“We’re seeing that some of these campaigns have actively started during October, clearly after the shutdown started, which is key to this story,” Natalia Campos Vargas, the deputy research director for messaging at Equis, told Rolling Stone last week. “During the government shutdown, where employees are being furloughed, these government entities are still spending millions of dollars on advertising on TV and digital platforms.”

According to the memo, the government even increased ad spending during the shutdown. Specifically, DHS increased spending on YouTube ads, going up from $292,000 alone in September to $332,000 in just the first three weeks of October.

In a statement to Rolling Stone on Nov. 2, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin confirmed that the funding came from this bill, and that “hiring law enforcement officers is mission critical in order to fix the crisis the Biden administration manufactured by letting millions of criminal illegal aliens come into the country… Nothing will slow us down from recruiting more officers.”

In a public Pandora community thread started in May 2025, a user who said they have been a Pandora user for more than 15 years shared that they were canceling their subscription due to an “overwhelming number” of DHS ads. The thread has received repeated comments from more users sharing their frustration with receiving similar advertisements.

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“This is not a random glitch. It is the result of ad targeting that equates music preference with immigration status,” read the user’s note. “Your platform appears to be allowing (or enabling) ads that racially and culturally profile users based on the language of the music they enjoy.”

In August, DHS confirmed to The Independent that it would be running advertisements on YouTube, Max, Amazon Prime Video, X, LinkedIn, and other internet platforms. Several Reddit threads discussed folks opting for VPNs to stream without receiving the ads, while others opted to cancel their subscriptions completely. “It isn’t just the fact that they’re advertising, it is how AWFUL the ads actually are,” wrote one user. “Forget the hateful bullshit, just the sheer stupidity of running that ad in Denver is fucking WILD,” added another.

Similarly, Spanish-language channels such as Univision and Telemundo have also run ads featuring Kristi Noem urging “illegal aliens” not to come into the country. “Join the mission to protect America with bonuses up to $50,000 and generous benefits. Apply now join.ice.gov and fulfill your mission,” says one ad.

When reached for comment, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Rolling Stone that there was “nothing offensive or partisan” with removing what it called criminals from the United States. “The ICE recruitment campaign is a resounding success with more than 150,000 applications rolling in from patriotic Americans answering the call to defend the Homeland by helping arrest and remove the worst of the worst from our country,” McLaughlin said.

Earlier this month, the AP reported that ad-spends by DHS had topped $6.5 million, and that spots had been run in several major cities, including Seattle, Chicago, Washington, D.C, and Miami, aimed at recruiting local officers frustrated with their cities’ immigration enforcement policies.

HBO, Pandora, and Hulu did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone’s request for comment. YouTube had no comment.

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This story was updated on Nov. 11 at 6 p.m. ET to include new data on the ad spending made by DHS and ICE on Spotify, Meta, and Google.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Lawsuit Against Spotify Calls ‘Billions’ of Drake Streams ‘Fraudulent’
Music

Lawsuit Against Spotify Calls ‘Billions’ of Drake Streams ‘Fraudulent’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

A new class action lawsuit against Spotify alleges the company has “turned a blind eye” to “mass-scale fraudulent streaming” on its platform and that one musician in particular has been the beneficiary of “billions” of fake streams: Drake.

The suit was filed in California District Court on Sunday night with rapper (and cousin of Snoop Dogg) RBX named as the lead plaintiff. While the most eye-popping allegations in the suit relate to Drake’s streaming numbers, there are no specific accusations of wrongdoing against the “Nokia” rapper. Only Spotify is named as a defendant. 

“Every month, under Spotify’s watchful eye, billions of fraudulent streams are generated from fake, illegitimate, and/or illegal methods,” like bots, the lawsuit states. Such “mass scale” streaming fraud, it continues, “causes massive financial harm to legitimate artists, songwriters, producers, and other rightsholders.” 

Streaming royalties are paid out through a “streamshare” model, where subscription and ad dollars are put into a giant pool, with the money divvied up based on each artist’s share of the total streams. Most of that money already flows upstream to the most successful artists and biggest rights holders. In this type of shared-pool model, fake streams hurt other artists whose shares aren’t inflated. (Spotify and representatives for Drake did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

While the lawsuit suggests that use of bots is widespread on Spotify, the only example it cites pertains to Drake. It claims “voluminous information” which Spotify “knows or should know” proves that a “substantial, non-trivial percentage” of Drake’s approximately 37 billion streams were “inauthentic and appeared to be the work of a sprawling network of Bot Accounts.”

This allegedly fraudulent activity took place between January 2022 and September 2025, according to the complaint. It claims an examination of Drake’s streams revealed “abnormal VPN usage” had obscured the location of the bot accounts streaming Drake’s songs. For instance, the lawsuit claims that over a four-day period in 2024, at least 250,000 streams of his song “No Face” originated in Turkey “but were falsely geomapped through the coordinated use of VPNs to the United Kingdom in [an] attempt to obscure their origins.”

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The lawsuit also alleges that “a large percentage” of accounts streaming Drake’s music were “geographically concentrated around areas whose population could not support” such a high volume of streams. No exact places or numbers were given, though the suit claimed that some streams reportedly originated in areas with “zero residential addresses.” 

The lawsuit also cites “significant and irregular uptick months” for Drake’s songs long after they’ve been released, as well as “slower and less dramatic” decay rates for Drake’s music compared to his contemporaries. (Decay rate refers to a typical streaming pattern where plays of an album or song naturally dwindle in the weeks and months after release.) 

The lawsuit further claims that “the number of streams of Drake’s music attributable to individual accounts is staggering and irregular,” with a “massive amount of accounts listening to Drake’s music” doing so “23 hours a day.” Less than two percent of these users, the lawsuit goes on to claim, account for “roughly 15 percent” of Drake’s streams; and about about nine percent of Drake’s streams “are attributable to less than one percent” of these users. 

“As a result,” the complaint claims, “Drake’s music accumulated far higher total streams compared to other highly streamed artists, even though those artists had far more ‘users’ than Drake.” 

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The lawsuit does not state how the plaintiffs, or their lawyers, obtained this data, nor does it shed any light on how the analysis of Drake’s streaming numbers was conducted.

These allegedly fraudulent streams “generated significant revenues” for Drake and his company Frozen Moments, at the expense of other artists, the lawsuit claims. But it also states that Spotify “deliberately turns a blind eye to fraudulent streaming” for its own benefit. 

While Spotify has taken steps in recent years to combat and tamp down streaming fraud, the lawsuit casts doubt on the efficacy of these measures and Spotify’s own incentives to stop fraud. It suggests that Spotify is particularly vulnerable to bots on the platform’s ad-supported free tier because myriad accounts can be generated without handing over a credit card number. By allegedly allowing bots to run rampant, Spotify can present high stream and user activity numbers to potential advertisers, the lawsuit alleges. 

“For Spotify, more users and music streams means more advertising dollars, so long as the true origin of the streams remains hidden,” the lawsuit states. (Spotify also loses money in the form of royalty payouts whenever fraudulent streaming occurs.)

“Artists across the streaming industry need accurate reporting of streams and effective fraud detection to ensure fair compensation. When streams are artificially inflated on a large scale – as my client’s lawsuit alleges has happened with respect to streams of Drake’s music – it affects the income of countless songwriters, performers, and producers,” Mark Pifko, one of the lawyers with Baron and Budd, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of RBX, tells Rolling Stone. “The lawsuit seeks to address these broader issues, recoup losses for affected musicians, and make the streaming ecosystem as fair and transparent as possible for everyone involved.”

The new lawsuit — and the claims regarding Drake’s music — notably come just weeks after a judge tossed Drake’s lawsuit against Universal Music Group, which contained its own allegations of streaming fraud. Though technically a defamation case, Drake accused his own record label UMG of artificially inflating the popularity of Kendrick Lamar’s diss track “Not Like Us,” marking arguably the most high-profile allegation of streaming fraud to date. UMG denied all of Drake’s allegations and the streaming fraud claims specifically, writing in a March legal filing, “There is no evidence of any such stream manipulation.”

Streaming fraud has been a topic of discussion in the industry for years. While pinpointing just how rampant it is — and calculating corresponding losses — is difficult, most estimates hover in the range of hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars. A 2019 Rolling Stone report noted that fake streams could be costing artists $300 million a year. A 2023 study in France found that between one and three percent of all streams in the country were fake. If those numbers held true globally, that would mean royalty losses up to $510 million. Last year, Beatdapp, a streaming fraud detection program, estimated that at least 10 percent of all streams are fraudulent, leading to annual losses of $2 to $3 billion. 

Efforts to crack down on streaming fraud have ramped up around the world. A Danish man was convicted last year, while another individual was arrested in Brazil back in March. Over the summer, officials in Turkey — where the lawsuit says some of the allegedly fraudulent Drake streams originated — started investigating Spotify over several allegations, including bribes for playlist placement and bot streams distorting domestic charts. (A rep for Spotify told Music Business Worldwide at the time that they are “cooperating with the investigation, are actively seeking to understand it, and will work toward a swift, constructive resolution with the Turkish Competition Authority.”) 

And in the U.S., federal prosecutors brought an unprecedented streaming fraud indictment last September against a North Carolina musician named Michael Smith. Smith is accused of using artificial intelligence to generate hundreds of thousands of songs, which he then allegedly streamed with bots. The feds claim that, at one point, Smith had as many as 10,000 active bot accounts streaming his music, and allegedly made over $10 million from this scheme. (Smith has denied the charges.)

Drake filed his first legal claims over “Not Like Us” just two months after Smith was arrested and indicted, and the official defamation suit was brought in January of this year. The streaming fraud allegations against UMG were based on statements from a purported anonymous whistleblower, who appeared on a show by DJ Akademiks, the popular streamer and longtime Drake associate. As stated in Drake’s lawsuit, the whistleblower claimed that Lamar’s label, Insterscope (a UMG subsidiary), paid him $2,500 “via third parties” to “use ‘bots’ to achieve 30 million streams on Spotify in the initial days following” the release of “Not Like Us.” Per the suit, the whistleblower said the goal was “jumpstarting” the song’s spread and making it “a crazy hit” on the platform.

UMG, in a motion to dismiss, noted the whistleblower “directly refuted” his own claim when he said that he was hired by Lamar’s manager, Anthony Saleh. In a revised complaint filed in April, Drake pared down his allegation, claiming “UMG was aware that third parties were using bots to stream the Recording and turned a blind eye, despite having the power to stop such behavior.”

The original suit also alleged that UMG “conferred financial benefits” to Apple so that Siri would “purposely misdirect users to” “Not Like Us” when they asked it to play Drake’s album, Certified Lover Boy. This claim was sourced partly to a viral video posted by HipHopDX’s Jeremy Hecht, who later clarified that Siri appeared capable of pulling up songs based on just lyrics it recognized. Thus, asking Siri to play Certified Lover Boy — without specifying “by Drake” — could conceivably trigger “Not Like Us,” because of Lamar’s line, “Certified loverboy? Certified pedophiles.” 

Even before Drake filed his defamation lawsuit, many legal experts and industry figures were skeptical of his allegations and their viability in court. Speaking with Rolling Stone last year about the petition, Brian Zisook, co-founder of the streaming service Audiomack, even suggested Drake might regret asking Universal to provide documentation of artificial streaming. 

“It’s likely that a lot of artists, Drake included, have benefited [from streaming bots] without their knowledge,” he said. Zisook also noted that many top artists have labels and distribution partners who have “opted into above-board programs like Discovery Mode and have artificially manipulated streams, and the artist has no idea. And they don’t ask questions because it looks good.”

Ultimately, Drake’s suit faltered. A judge summarily dismissed the suit’s defamation accusations, ruling that “Not Like Us,” as a diss track, qualified as “nonactionable opinion.” And while the judge’s decision largely centered on the validity of Drake’s defamation claims — or lack thereof — she also briefly addressed his streaming fraud allegations. She said Drake’s evidence essentially amounts to “Tweets by individual users and reporting from fans,” and called his “reliance on online comments and reporting insufficient to meet the plausibility standard.”

The proposed class action filed Sunday claims damages in excess of $5 million. It’s asking that a federal judge certify the lawsuit as a class action, order Spotify to identify alleged victims, and oversee a jury trial seeking compensatory and punitive damages.

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RBX, born Eric Dwayne Collins, helped author Dr. Dre’s West Coast anthem “Let Me Ride” and was featured on several tracks for Dre’s seminal album The Chronic.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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No Kings Organizers Call for Spotify Boycott Over ICE Ads
Music

No Kings Organizers Call for Spotify Boycott Over ICE Ads

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Non-profit organization Indivisible Project, one of the organizers behind the No Kings protests, has called for a Spotify boycott in response to the music streamer running ICE recruitment ads on its platform.

In a blog post titled “Don’t Stream Fascism,” Indivisible wrote, “Spotify is running ads recruiting agents for ICE, the federal agency charged with mass deportation and surveillance of immigrant communities. These ads target vulnerable populations, promise signing bonuses, and normalize fear and intimidation in our neighborhoods.”

The boycott urges Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek, along with incoming co-CEOs Gustav Söderström and Alex Norström, to immediately “terminate all ICE and DHS advertising contracts,” update its advertising policy to “prohibit government propaganda and hate-based recruitment campaigns,” and commit to “defending civil rights and standing up for communities under threat from authoritarian actions.”

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Until then, Indivisible is calling on listeners and artists to cancel their Spotify subscriptions, peacefully protest outside the company’s offices, studios, or major events, and urge artists, podcasters, and labels to publicly denounce the ads.

Earlier this month, Spotify said it would continue running the ICE ads as part of the US government’s broad television, streaming, and online campaign, reasoning that the content did not violate advertising policies. Similar advertising has appeared on YouTube, HBO Max, and Hulu in recent months.

Spotify had already faced boycotts after reports that Ek has a financial stake in the AI defense company Helsing. Artists who have pulled their catalogs include Massive Attack, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, and Deerhoof.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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OneOff, the Latest AI-Powered Shopping App, Wants to Be Spotify for Fashion
Fashion

OneOff, the Latest AI-Powered Shopping App, Wants to Be Spotify for Fashion

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84


It certainly isn’t impossible to identify and shop brands spotted in celebrity street style — it can just take a bit of digging through social media accounts, search engines and retailers. A new startup wants to streamline the process. Bobby Maylack, former chief creative officer at Cameo, …

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October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Spotify Teams With Netflix on Podcasts, Touts Audiobook Listener Gains
Music

Spotify Teams With Netflix on Podcasts, Touts Audiobook Listener Gains

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Spotify has announced two new developments in its push into non-music content: a video podcast deal with Netflix and statistics that show subscribers are quickly adopting audiobooks on the platform. 

Starting in the U.S. in early 2026, podcasts from Spotify Studios and The Ringer, a media company founded by sportswriter Bill Simmons that was acquired by Spotify in 2020, will be available on Netflix, the streaming giant announced Tuesday (Oct. 14). Among the shows that will be available at the partnership’s onset are The Bill Simmons Show, the basketball oriented The Zach Lowe Show, true crime titles Conspiracy Theories and Serial Killers, and pop culture podcasts The Rewatchables and The Big Picture. 

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For Netflix, video podcasts provide an additional way to reach viewers, explained Lauren Smith, Netflix vp of content licensing and programming strategy. “As video podcasts continue to grow in popularity, our partnership with Spotify allows us to bring full video versions of these top shows to both Netflix and Spotify audiences,” she said in a statement. “From pop culture and lifestyle to true crime and sports, this curated selection of video podcasts adds fresh voices and new perspectives to Netflix, making our entertainment lineup more exciting than ever.” 

Spotify also announced a slew of audiobook statistics that show the company is making progress in its ambition to advance the size of the audiobook market. Of subscribers who are eligible to stream audiobooks on Spotify, more than half have done so, the company revealed Tuesday. Audiobook listeners are up 36% year over year, and listening hours are up 37% year over year.  

Spotify made audiobooks available for streaming in the U.K. and Australia in October 2023, followed by the U.S. a month later. Subscribers to the Premier tier are given 15 hours of listening per month and can purchase additional time. Audiobooks are currently available to Spotify subscribers in 14 countries, including the U.S., U.K., Canada, Germany, France, Australia, the Netherlands and Ireland. Approximately 500,000 titles are available in the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, Ireland and New Zealand.  

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In the year since audiobooks launched in France and Benelux, French and Dutch listening hours are up 10% month over month, Spotify reported. In the six months since launching in Germany, audiobook listeners are up over 9% month over month.  

Spotify entered the audiobook market with the intention of taking on the entrenched leader in the market, Amazon-owned Audible. The goal, CEO Daniel Ek explained in Feb. 2024, is to “grow the pie for the publishing industry and expand the interest in audiobooks to an entirely new set of listeners.” That required raising prices, however, and Spotify increased its monthly fee in the U.S. to $11.99 for individuals in June 2024. Audiobook-free options are available for existing Spotify subscribers for $10.99 per month.  

Audiobooks can also help Spotify’s bottom line. Ek said in 2023 that offering the long-form audio content “will increase engagement on Spotify, which will then…reduce churn,” or the percentage of subscribers who lapse in a month. Churn results in additional costs to re-acquire the lapsed subscribers and customer acquisition costs to recruit new subscribers. As Billboard reported in 2021, Citi analyst Jason Bazinet estimated that Spotify’s churn rate fell from 7.7% in 2015 to 4% in 2020, due primarily to family plans that kept people subscribing longer and raised customers’ lifetime value. 

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October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Sylvan Esso Unveil New Single, Cut Ties With Spotify
Music

Sylvan Esso Unveil New Single, Cut Ties With Spotify

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s an eventful day in the world of North Carolina indie duo Sylvan Esso, who have released their first single in three years, “WDID,” and pledged to remove their digital catalog from Spotify. The confrontational cut is the first to be released on their own label, Psychic Hotline.

“As we prepare to release new music, we have to decide what we want to be a part of and what we don’t,” Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn said in a statement. “To that end, with Sylvan Esso being on our own label for the first time, we have decided to remove our music from Spotify. While no solution is perfect, we simply can’t continue to put our life’s work in a store that, in addition to all its other glaring flaws, directly funds war machines.”

Sylvan Essso have been recording at their own Chapel Hill, N.C.-area studio with assistance from Jake Luppen. “WDID” will be backed by another new song, “KEEP ON,” when it is released as a 12-inch vinyl single on Jan. 9. The latter was “built from a week of improvisation” with bassist Daniel Aged and drummer TJ Maiani.

“She’s still kind of in zygote form,” Meath jokes with SPIN when asked how far along the new album is. “We’re doing a new thing where, instead of every other Sylvan Esso record where we’ve written 10 songs and those are the ones we’re recording, this time we’re writing a lot of them. We have about 30 or 40 ideas and we’re going to slowly work our way into finding 10 of them that we want to be on the record, which is so fun.”

Quizzed on the sound of the fresh material, Meath says, “we’ve been really delving into late ’90s breakbeat music. Lots of Boards of Canada, Beck’s Odelay and Madonna’s Ray of Light. A huge influence for me is Soul Coughing, who are wizards of sampling. We’re essentially creating those samples for ourselves and sampling ourselves on our own record.”

Meath has also dipped her toe into acting in the Taylor McFadden-directed Lovers, which premiered last year at the Denver International Film Festival.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Spotify founder Daniel Ek is stepping down as CEO
Music

Spotify founder Daniel Ek is stepping down as CEO

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Spotify founder Daniel Ek has announced that he will be stepping down from the role of CEO.

Ek founded the streaming service two decades ago and has been CEO since. He announced today (Tuesday September 30) that he will be transitioning to an executive chairman role for the company on January 1, 2026.

Taking his place as co-CEOs will be Spotify co-presidents Alex Norström and Gustav Söderström. The former currently serves as the company’s chief business officer, while Söderström leads Spotify’s product and technology unit.

“As Executive Chairman, I will spend more of my time on the long arc: strategy, capital allocation, regulatory efforts, and the calls that will shape the next decade for Spotify,” Ek said in his statement. “Gustav and Alex will continue to report to me, and we will work closely together with our Board of Directors.”

He added that the move has been made to allow him to shift his focus towards other businesses.

“A personal note on what’s next for me. I am often asked, ‘How do we build more Spotifys out of Europe?’ That’s why several years ago, I announced my intention to help create more of these supercompanies — companies that are developing new technologies to tackle some of the biggest challenges of our time,” he added.

An update from me 👇 pic.twitter.com/xc0w3BWWAO

— Daniel Ek (@eldsjal) September 30, 2025

One of the businesses outside of Spotify that Ek is involved in is his investment company, Prima Materia. Over the summer, the brand led a €600million (£524million) investment into Helsing – a Munich-based company creating drones and artificial intelligence for military operations.

The move led to a number of high profile artists to pull their music from Spotify, including King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, in a bid to “put pressure on these Dr. Evil tech bros to do better”.

Those joining them in the boycott was Xiu Xiu, who shared plans to remove their music from the platform over Ek’s “investment in AI war drones”, Deerhoof, who said they didn’t “want our success being tied to AI battle tech”, and Wu Lyf, who took down their latest single ‘A New Life Is Coming’ from the streaming service.

Ek has said that his new role in Spotify will reflect a European set-up, and that he will continue to have a hands-on approach with the company. Spotify board director Woody Marshall added that the leadership changes had been in motion for years.

“We have tremendous confidence in Alex and Gustav as they step into these roles,” Marshall said (via The Verge). “They each have more than 15 years with the company and have been instrumental in driving our success and enabling Spotify to lead our industry.”

Controversy around Spotify and Daniel Ek extends beyond his ties to Helsing. In 2024, Ek sparked backlash for his comments relating to the cost of “creating content”, with countless users and musicians describing him as “out of touch”.

Today, with the cost of creating content being close to zero, people can share an incredible amount of content. This has sparked my curiosity about the concept of long shelf life versus short shelf life. While much of what we see and hear quickly becomes obsolete, there are…

— Daniel Ek (@eldsjal) May 29, 2024

He would later walk back on his comments, saying that he had no intention of dismissing the struggles faced by musicians and using the “reductive” label of “content”.

Around that same time, the CEO came under fire as it was reported that Spotify had made profits of over €1billion (£860million), but at the expense of staff being laid off, artists struggling to make any income from streaming, and subscription prices rising.

It became even harder for artists to make money from the platform last year, when Spotify officially demonetised all songs on the platform with less than 1,000 streams. The policy was launched on April 1 2024, but had been planned by the platform for some time. It was quickly criticised for making it harder for artists to generate royalties and restricting new artists looking to crack the music industry.

Kate Nash was one of the many artists shedding light on the lack of pay-off, launching her “bum on the back of a fire truck” protest, heading to the London office of Spotify, and saying, via megaphone: “Artists are paid 0.003 of a penny per stream whilst [Spotify] demonetised 80 per cent of music on the platform.”

Primal Scream bassist Simone Marie Butler also spoke out against the platform, saying that Ek was “sitting on his yacht laughing at your Spotify top five while he cashes in on music he had nothing to do with, calls it ‘content’ and artists still get £0.04 per stream.”

Others to criticise the platform and its impact on the music industry have included Anthrax drummer Charlie Benante, who described streaming as the place “where music goes to die”, and Cradle Of Filth frontman Dani Filth, who said he “owes it” to other musicians not to have an account.

Kate Nash, 2024 CREDIT: @emilymarcovecchio

Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor also shared how streaming has “mortally wounded” many artists, while James Blake claimed that “the brainwashing worked and now people think music is free”.

Last December, a site parodying Spotify Wrapped was taken down at the request of Spotify‘s legal team, after it calculated the amount users pay in subscription fees compared the royalties paid to the artists throughout the year.

At the start of 2025, nominees for the Songwriter Of The Year category at this year’s Grammy Awards boycotted Spotify’s party in retaliation to its treatment of songwriters.“After some thought, I couldn’t in good conscience support this initiative given their approach to bundling royalties,” said Jessie Jo Dillon, one of the artists boycotting. “It is very nice to be individually honoured, but it is better for me and my entire songwriter community to be paid fairly for our art. There are no songs without songwriters.”

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Sylvan Esso Is Pulling Its Catalog From Spotify
Music

Sylvan Esso Is Pulling Its Catalog From Spotify

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Sylvan Esso is the latest high-flying act to yank their catalog from Spotify.

The two-time Grammy Award-nominated electro-pop act is boycotting the streaming music giant, confirming their move with the announcement of their new release, “WDID,” their first in three years.

Led by Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn, Sylvan Esso has accumulated close to one billion Spotify streams, across four full-length studio albums, including 2020’s Free Love and 2017’s What Now, both of which were nominated for best dance/electronic album at the Grammys. Going forward, Sylvan Esso’s streaming footprint will be wiped.

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The new track, “WDID,” is the first release on the band’s own record label, Psychic Hotline, announced back in 2021.

Released today, Sept. 30, “WDID” was hewn from an “intense period of creation and experimentation” for Meath and Sanborn, reads a statement from the band, and is delivered as an “abrasive, all-caps confrontation against an all-consuming cascade of crises”. It won’t, of course, be available on Spotify.

The fresh cut was recorded at Sylvan Esso’s own studio, Betty’s, in Chapel Hill, NC, and features additional production from Jake Luppen (Hippo Campus, Samia). Its official music video is helmed by Aaron Anderson and Eric Timothy Carlson.

Sylvan Esso joins an exodus of artists from Spotify, many chiding the company’s Sweden-born founder and CEO Daniel Ek, who reportedly invested $1 billion into Helsing, a defense company that sells AI software to inform military situations. A spokesperson for Helsing insists its technology isn’t being used in war zones outside of Ukraine.

The artist revolt includes Massive Attack, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Deerhoof, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, and others.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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