Tech Won't Save Us - How Spotify Remade the Music Industry w/ Liz Pelly [Replay]
Episode Date: January 1, 2026Paris Marx is joined by Liz Pelly to discuss how Spotify changes how we listen to music and the broader impacts it has on the wider music industry. This episode previously aired in February 2025. Liz... Pelly is a music journalist and the author of Mood Machine. Tech Won’t Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Support the show on Patreon. The podcast is made in partnership with The Nation. Production is by Kyla Hewson. Production for this episode was originally by Eric Wickham. Also mentioned in this episode: Shout-out to the book The People’s Platform by Astra Taylor You can read an excerpt of Liz’s book in Harper’s. The CEO of Suno AI said people “don’t enjoy” making music. The Edmonton Public Library was mentioned for spearheading some cool projects featuring local musicians - combat capitalism by supporting the cool projects operating out of your own local library! Hoopla works with local libraries to share music (and Libby partners with libraries to share audiobooks)
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It's very risky when we start letting companies like Universal Music Group and these big tech companies be determining like who is a serious artist and who is an unprofessional hobbyist who doesn't deserve to make like any royalties at all for their work.
These are really slippery slopes, I think.
Hello and welcome to Tech Won't Save Us, made in partnership with The Nation magazine.
I'm your host, Paris Marks, and apparently we're in 2026 now.
Happy New Year.
Hopefully this year will not be, you know, as bad as the one that we have just experienced.
But let me be honest, my hopes are not particularly high on that front.
But here's hoping the power of these tech billionaires gets rained in.
Countries start to seize back control of their digital infrastructures.
and maybe we even start to have some kind of concerted opposition to the effort to impose this
kind of digital world created to benefit these tech oligarchs at the expense of all of us.
That's my hope.
We'll see how it goes.
As I mentioned in the last episode, to start off 2026, we're actually going to look back at
some of the conversations that I had in 2025.
Some of the ones that I think, you know, are probably important to have a second look at in light
of everything that has happened. And one of those that really stood out to me was my conversation
with Liz Pelly, who is a music journalist and author of Mood Machine, a fantastic book
about Spotify and streaming music in general. And not only did I think that this conversation was
really fascinating and that I think that Liz is doing really great work, but I have seen
a number of people in the past few weeks talking about getting off of Spotify in particular,
some people even talking about moving back to like physical music, however possible that is,
away from streaming services altogether.
And so I thought in light of those conversations, you know, conversations about how we listen to music,
but also how we, you know, kind of consume and engage with culture more broadly because I also
see these conversations happening with regard to movies and video streaming services and whether,
you know, we should go back to Blu-rays or something like that or otherwise.
ways of, you know, engaging with these mediums as, again, you know, there are more people questioning
the impacts of these business models that have arguably led us in a kind of negative direction
over the past decade or two. And of course, in the film world, that is getting to the point
where it looks like Netflix might actually be buying up Warner Bros. Discovery, one of the basically
old original Hollywood movie studios and everything that kind of comes with that. And of course,
you know, on the on the music front, we see Spotify, which obviously transformed a lot about how
we listen to music, but also as Liz will explain how music is even made, you know, how the kind
of means of listening affects the type of music that gets created because of the incentive
structures and, you know, just the format and all these sorts of things. And, you know, the head
of Spotify, Daniel Eck, is now a major investor in like military AI drones, you know, like
a military company that deals in death at the end of the day. And, you know, obviously Silicon
Valley and the tech industry's relationship to the military. And of course, you know, Daniel Eck being
someone who's in Sweden. So when we say Silicon Valley in this sense, it's kind of like not so
much the geographical location, but all of these tech billionaires and, you know, the effects that
they're having around the world and the places where they wield influence are kind of moving into
this space of trying to benefit from this remilitarization, this nationalism. And, you know,
And, you know, the kind of more hostile world that we seem to be moving into.
So there are so many different things there.
But basically it comes back to this question of what is streaming doing to how we listen to music?
Are there different ways of approaching that?
And, you know, to me, especially as I'm thinking about the ways that we engage with these technologies, obviously last year I spoke about getting off of U.S. tech.
But paired with that was also this broader question of like, do we need all this technology that we're using now?
is adopting these things really benefiting us at the end of the day and is there another route
that we could possibly take? I feel like, you know, thinking about streaming music in particular
is a way into a conversation like that, especially as, you know, people seem to be looking
at, sure, going back to vinyl, but even like cassettes and CDs and things like that too. So, yeah,
I don't know. I think that it's an important conversation. I think it's a really interesting
conversation. I think Liz does really fantastic work. And I think it's a good one to kind of revisit as
we start this year and you know as I start to prepare for what the rest of this year for tech
won't save us and you know my other projects is going to be looking like so as always with that said
if you do enjoy this conversation make sure to leave a five-star of you on your podcast platform
of choice you can share the show on social media or with any friends or colleagues who you think
would learn from it and obviously tech won't save us is a show that relies on the support of you
the listeners so if you do enjoy these conversations if you do enjoy these critical perspectives
on the tech industry, the way that these billionaires are wielding their power, your support
is essential to allowing me to continue to do this. And so as we start off the year, it's a great
time to become a Patreon supporter to help support the work that goes into making the show.
And you can do that by going to patreon.com slash tech won't save us, where you can, of course,
get ad-free episodes, a backlog of premium content. And of course, there'll be more of that coming
this year and even stickers if you support at a certain level. So thank you so much and enjoy this
week's conversation with Liz Pelle. Liz, welcome back to Tech Won't Save Us. Thanks so much for
having me back. As you reminded me before we were recording, it's actually been quite a while. I forget
how old the show is sometimes. And you were, you know, a guest on the show very early on. But you have
this new book, Mood Machine, where you have done so much more research into this company and the
broader effects of its model on artists, on how we, you know, listen to music. And I want to
dig into all that with you. I think I would start by asking, how did you get into this topic?
Like, why was this something that was on your radar and you thought was really important that you
wanted to spend more time to dig into, you know, and to learn more about the broader consequences
of? Thanks so much for the question. And yeah, you know, like you mentioned, getting ready for this
interview, I went back and I was listening to our interview from 2020. It's hard to believe that
it was that long ago. And this question is one that I've been getting a lot, having a new book
out. And it's interesting. I started writing about Spotify. The first article I wrote came out in
2017. I had started writing about it in 2016. And there are things that originally initially
got me interested in writing about the subject. But at all different points throughout the years,
you know, there are different things that sort of keep you interested in the same subject matter.
I'm sure you probably could relate to like being someone who writes about technology. The things
that first got me interested in it aren't necessarily like the things that have kept me interested in it.
I think back in 2016, 2017, there were a few different things that initially got me interested
in the subject.
One, I'm someone who's always had a foot in the world of journalism and also a foot in the
world of independent music as a participant, I worked at venues and booked all ages,
shows for a long time.
And I think that part of being involved in independent music kind of involves this constant
negotiation of what that even means.
And there is a point in the mid-2010s when it became really clear that, you know, this idea of independent music was becoming not just about independence from the major labels, but also grappling with the technology companies that the major labels were increasingly partnered with that were sort of selling themselves to the independent music world as these democratizing forces for culture or as these sort of empowering tools.
I know their influence is that around 2015, I read this book by Asha Taylor, Calls the People's Platform.
I know you've had Asher on the show before.
And you know that whole...
I love that book.
Yeah, that book made a really big impact on me.
You know, I think back on it, I actually just kind of stumbled upon it in blue stockings in New York City
and independent feminist bookstore.
But it made a big impact on me.
And that, you know, whole book was sort of debunking this idea that the Internet had really democratized culture
in the way that some of us maybe hoped or thought that it.
it would at a certain point. So it was kind of like fresh off of reading that book and having
interviewed Ashtra about it at the time, kind of seeing the ways in which streaming services
were sort of ingraining themselves in independent music scenes. And then the last thing of like
the three things that I usually cite is also that as a freelance music journalist, I think at
the time in the mid-2010s, I also was just a little bit like bored with music journalism.
Like when you're a freelance music writer, you do, you know, you interview bands about their
albums that are coming up. You write album reviews. At that time, that was like the height of
like the clickbait era in journalism. So it was a lot of like getting asked to write like 200 word
blurbs for like best of lists and stuff like that. And I do specifically remember just having this
moment where I sat down and thought like what else could I be doing within the realm of music
journalism and made a list of three stories and one of them was Spotify playlists. Luckily, like one of
my best friends at the time worked in the music industry. And when I told her that I was thinking
about investigating Spotify playlists, she happened to like have some intel specifically into
the ways that major labels were sort of seating their tracks throughout the Spotify playlist ecosystem
at the time and sort of helped put me on the track with the first story that I did. Not to give like
too much of a whining answer, but I'd say those are some of the things that made me initially really
interested in the subject. And then I think that part of what made me continue to be interested in
the subject was just kind of, you know, seeing how the conversation changed over the years and how
like contributing to not just me, but there's like a group of writers who were sort of critically
covering the streaming ecosystem, you know, another one being like David Turner, who is doing
the newsletter penny fractions. It just kind of seemed like it was useful to musicians and people
in the independent music world. Definitely like shortly after we spoke in 2020 and in 2020,
seeing the United Musicians and Allied Workers' Justice at Spotify campaign.
They put on these protests at Spotify offices all around the world.
And I was thinking back on it.
And like, even when we spoke in 2020, it would have been really hard for me to imagine
that within a year, musicians would become so organized that they'd be organizing a global
day of action outside of Spotify offices.
So moments like that also, I think, are things that kind of like kept me thinking,
like, okay, this is like worth continuing to pursue to try to contribute.
be something that is useful.
Yeah, that makes a ton of sense, right?
It's a story that keeps evolving.
There's always new aspects to it.
And you can see that it has this real deep impact, not just on the way we listen to things with
the people who make this music as well, right?
You know, communities that you're very close to have been very engaged in.
And so I wonder if we're thinking about Spotify, I think a lot of people are familiar with
what it is now, how it works.
But where does this company actually come from?
And what is the real story behind its founding that maybe has been obscured through public relations and, you know, other stories that have been told about it?
Yeah, you know, it's super interesting.
Even when I actually started working on this book, I started working on it in 2022 or I actually technically started working on the book proposal as early as 2019, but didn't really start working on the book until 22.
And at the very beginning, I wasn't even really sure if it was specifically going to be a book about Spotify.
I thought maybe it would just be a book about streaming or music under platform capitalism.
But as time went on, I realized that, you know, actually what I was writing was a book about Spotify.
So I figured, okay, let's just like go in with this.
And that required, you know, doing a deeper dive on the history of the company than I had really done before and going to Stockholm a few times and trying to track down, you know, not just former Spotify employees,
which, like, luckily, I was able to talk to quite a few of them,
but also people who were in Stockholm at the time,
people who were kind of, like, involved in the tech scene
and also other journalists and academics from Sweden.
Spotify launched in some of its first markets in Europe in 2008,
but the company was created officially two years earlier in 2006 in Sweden.
And it was started by these two guys, Daniel Ack and Martin Lawrensen,
whose background was in the advertising.
industry. At that point, there had been other streaming startups. There had been other companies
that had been trying to sort of make streaming happen for a while. The major record labels
in response to the impact of Napster on the music business in the late 90s and early 2000s,
they had tried to start their own streaming services, which is chronicled in the book. People talk
about them now. There were these hilarious failures because the major labels are so inept to be
quite frank, and like not really good at what they do. Those services did not take off. There were
other apps that had kind of come along, other companies that had tried to do something in streaming.
And if you listen to people in the music business, you know, they'll say Spotify was the first
company that really got the technology right, that created an app that like felt like the music
was on your computer when you pressed play. Really emphasis on like how the user interface was
more sleek and loaded more quickly than others. But something that I think is important to remember
and that I try to emphasize a lot in the book is that these people who started Spotify,
they didn't come from the music world. They came from the world of advertising. And I think that
something else that's important to remember is that at that time in the mid-2000s in Sweden,
piracy and file sharing at that time was popular everywhere. But it was really popular in
Sweden in a different way. It was politicized in a different way. It had a different sort of culture
to it. There was more of a question, you know, where maybe in the United States, it was, you know,
more widely deemed to be something like bad that needed to be stopped. In Sweden, there were
these bigger cultural questions, like maybe file sharing actually is a good thing, you know, maybe
the music business and the entertainment industries have too much power and maybe like something
does have to be done to make art and culture and music and movies more accessible.
There was even a pirate party in Sweden.
There was a political party that was completely founded on being pro-piracy as their political agenda.
For the research, I specifically focused on researching a little bit about looking into the pirate
bay because when Spotify launched or was created in 2006, the early staff talk about how really
what they saw as their competition wasn't other apps in the music business, but their competition
was the Pirate Bay because it was so popular and it was what everyone used in Sweden to listen
to music. Spotify sort of took on this interesting character in Sweden where like on one hand
they were sort of positioning themselves as this legal alternative to piracy at a moment where
not just people in the music business but also lawmakers because of how politicized piracy was
there. They were, like, really looking for something that would solve this. You know, I went and spoke
with in Sweden, this person named Rasmus Fleischer, who is a co-author of this book called Spotify
Tear Down, but he also was a founding member of this organization called Pirat Baran, which means
the Bureau of Piracy. And that was formed in response to this Hollywood lobbying group called
Anti-Pirat Baran, which means the Anti-Piracy Bureau. And in response to Anti-Piracy Bureau, and in response to
anti-Pirot-Baron, this group of musicians at like punks and ravers and hackers, they were like,
okay, well, if you're anti-Pirat-Baron, where Pyrrot-Baron and actually we're a lobbying group too,
but we're lobbying for the rights of people who think file sharing is important. We're a pro-piracy
lobbying group. I think that kind of speaks to like the conversation at the time. Or as, you know,
some of those folks told me some of the cultural climate that someone like Daniel X,
or Martin Lawrenceon might have been capitalizing on a little bit.
Their initial idea for Spotify was, you know,
to try to create a content delivery mechanism
that provided sort of the ease and experience of piracy,
but that was funded by advertising.
So at the very beginning, there wasn't any idea
of like a subscription model.
They just basically wanted you to feel like
you had your piracy enabled collection on your hard drive,
but it was all funded by ads
because their background was in the advertising business.
It's such a fascinating story and so much of it I didn't really understand.
You know, like I had a basic idea of where Spotify came from.
But, you know, this notion of like the climate in Sweden at the time it was emerging was something that was completely new to me.
You know, and the fact that these streaming services, there were other versions of them in the past.
And as you describe in the book, those streaming services that were launched by the labels were described by some people as a huge conspiracy, you know, not.
meaning conspiracy theory, but, you know, like all these companies coming together to like capture
this kind of market. And, you know, ultimately, even though Sweden has this particular kind
kind of political climate around piracy at the time, what ends up coming out of that is this
kind of like ultra commercial version of what this should be. So what is the Spotify model that
eventually emerges? And how does that evolve as Spotify has to go into negotiations with these
major labels to ensure that all the music that they own and control can be on a service like
that. So like I mentioned, the model initially was to create a product that would offer, you know,
this large library of content. It actually is painful to me to use the word content, but there's
kind of no way of telling the history of the company without using some of the language of how they
talk about music. But every time I say the word, I'm like, oh, I can't even, it's hard to take myself
seriously. But their initial model was, yeah, this product that would give you this large
library of like any music you could possibly imagine, supported by ads. But, you know, if you
listen to these early conference appearances by top executives, early employees, you know,
it's quite clear that the beginning, it wasn't even really sure if they would do music.
Like, they had also considered doing a video streaming service and their initial patents. Don't
specifically mention music. It's just kind of like any type of media, really. And eventually they
ended up landing on music. In some of the interviews, they talk about how the small file size was
like part of that. Probably also everything I just explained about the weak status of the music
business and things like that. When I was reading that section, it reminded me a bit of like
Amazon, you know, and how Bezos like started this business. And he was like, okay, we'll do
books because it's easy to do books. It's easy to ship them. Like there are all these benefits
to doing so. And then we can expand into other things. Like it really spoke to me when I was
reading what you wrote about Spotify, that it was like, oh, they chose music because it seemed
like it made Sansom was easiest to do, not because they were particularly interested or cared
about music. Yeah, absolutely. And I mean, now you see Spotify moving on to like podcasts and
audiobooks. And in some ways, it's sort of illuminating how it never really was like, you know,
about music per se. In some ways, music just sort of allowed them to grow this user base and grow
this platform pretty similar to Amazon and books for sure. But then, you know, it was really the
negotiation with the major labels through which the subscription tier emerged as well.
So currently, you know, Spotify makes most of its money through subscriptions.
So people paying, you know, 1099 a month or as we just were discussing more in a place like
Canada because Canada has rightfully imposed taxes on streaming services in order to fund
local music and other content, as they say. But yeah, you know, most of their revenue
comes from subscription services, advertising is still part of it as well. And then, you know,
increasingly a service like Spotify, you know, they refer to it as a two-sided marketplace
when they speak to investors about what their model is. We're on one side, they're selling a
product to the listener. And on the other side, they're selling a product to musicians. So they
also increasingly, they refer to it as quote unquote marketplace, the side of the company where
they're selling advertisements to musicians and promotional opportunities like algorithmic
promotion in exchange for reduced royalty rates, where banner ads or like shelves on the
homepage. So like that also is part of their business model as well, but the vast majority
of the revenue comes from subscriptions. I think that makes a ton of sense, right? And I think it's
interesting to see that evolution and the influence that the labels have had through that
negotiation through that leverage that they have where even though they don't own this streaming
service like the one that they used to, you know, they have still influenced how it has evolved
over time and the types of model and the way that this model works and the way that they
benefit from it, right? I feel like one of the pieces that really stood out as I was reading it was
how much the labels have been able to, and the major labels in particular like, right?
Like the big three labels, Warner Universal and Sony have really been able to profit immensely
from this model from Spotify, even as we have these discussions about how musicians aren't making
or the vast majority of musicians aren't making nearly enough and we're not paid enough through
this model. Can you talk about that distinction and how that actually works? So part of it is
in order for a service like this to function, the streaming services have to sign deals with
the rights holders. So streaming services don't sign deals directly with musicians.
they only sign them with rights holders.
So the rights holders that they'll sign deals with are Sony Universal Warner.
For the independent labels, it's this industry trade organization called Merloon
that sort of gives the independent labels a collective voice in the negotiating processes
that has existed since it formed just before Spotify launched in 2008, actually.
And then they'll also sign deals with distribution companies.
So these are companies like maybe you heard Distro Kid or TuneCorp,
Or there's these sort of like self-serve companies that like any, you know, if you like recorded a song on your computer today and we're like, I want to put this on Spotify, you could go set up an account with DistroKid and distribute your music to streaming services in a few days.
So the streaming services maintain deals with like these these rights holders.
And because major labels, you know, sit on the rights, the copyrights of so much of the back catalog of what we think of when we think of when we.
think of the history of recorded music. They own a huge percentage of the recorded music market.
That puts them in this really incredibly outsized position when it comes to negotiating each of
those deals. So each rights holder has its own deal with Spotify, and those deals dictate the
terms of royalty rate, the terms under which the relationship exists. So those contracts are
incredibly secret, you know, like even artists that are on those labels, like artists on major
labels, artists on independent labels that work with Merlin, like, don't get to review the
contracts. It's only a very like small privileged group of people who ever even get access to
seeing what's in those contracts. But yeah, the majors, you know, they have this like extreme
outsized influence and negotiating power when it comes to working out those contracts because of
how much music they own the rights to. So in the initial deals at Spotify and other
streaming services, the major labels were able to negotiate for themselves, things like really
big advances, equity stakes in the company. They were able to have, you know, certain perks in their
contracts having to do with marketing, advertising. And they also were able to negotiate for themselves
specific minimum rates. So, you know, on the free tier, for example, they might have like a per user
rate or a per stream rate that they get that is not necessarily guaranteed to other rights holders
because of the pro rata model that dictates the entire royalty system.
A lot of how I write about it in the book is still drawing from, you know, there's this one
contract that leaked and there's a Sony's contract with Spotify in 2015, and it's still largely
kind of like the best glimpse that you can kind of have into what one of those original
initial contracts with a streaming service at the time
would have looked like, but there are certain things about it
that were kind of terms that had come to be standard
at that time anyway.
Like, it's really interesting to see that,
but it's also really concerning, right,
to know the outsized power that they have
in shaping how all this works and, you know,
how that then affects everyone else.
And I think we're going to come back to this
to talk about it a bit further.
But you mentioned earlier how Playlist was one of the ways
that you really got into looking into,
Spotify as a company and how that works. And I feel like the book deals a lot with that,
right, as an important aspect of how Spotify as a company works and how it has evolved over
time to be so focused on these playlists, particular playlist around moods rather than just genres
and how originally starting with human curation that has moved much more into the use of
algorithms and AI and these sorts of things to shape what is going on here. So how did Spotify move to
become so dependent on playlist? What was the incentive there? And how have we seen that change the
way that people consume music and, you know, just shaping the way that people use this platform more
broadly? Yeah, it's a great question because looking back at the early history of the company,
in the early days, the experience of using Spotify was much more like a search bar. You would have to
know what song you were looking for, what artist or what album you were looking for. And it really was
only as they were getting ready to launch in the United States and after they launched
in the United States, when, you know, there started to be much more of an emphasis on, like,
how do we grow beyond just the dedicated music enthusiast type listeners and how do we get
this more, like, mass, generalized audience? There's, like, a lot of things that impacted that.
Like, you know, one was, like, launching the United States where there's more competition,
there were more preexisting music services. This would have been, yeah, like,
2011. Something else also is that compared to, for example, Sweden or some of the other European
places in the United States, like the iTunes store was really popular in a way that it like
didn't catch on in certainly in Sweden, maybe other places. So they were sort of like competing
against that, competing with Pandora. And then additionally, it was also around the time when, you know,
they started taking VC investment like before they even launched in 2008. But at that point,
they had, you know, taken on more rounds of VC investment.
And I think it was around this sort of time where like maybe the creeping pressures of
that had started to kind of like catch up with them.
Like it was definitely a moment where there is a strong need to grow the user base
and to figure out new ways of convincing people to subscribe or to get onto the platform.
So I think that the shift into curation is very much like a growth tactic.
And something else that was super interesting was in my interview,
views with former employees, people who were close to the company at the time, like, learning that
there's actually like a specific moment where the company after they had launched in the United
States had actually like hired a research agency to conduct a research on their own user base
and found that, you know, this would have been like as they were starting to experiment with
playlists and more curation and, you know, found that the vast majority of listeners were
coming to the platform for more of what they would refer to as.
like a lean back experience than a lean in experience. So it seems like both because they were
trying to grow, maybe as a result of some of those research that they'd been doing on their own
user base, they really like ran with that and started to really optimize for more of this
lean back listener, maybe this more like user who isn't super concerned with the artist or the
album or even really really what they're listening to and it's happy to just like, you know,
pick a playlist category and hit play. I found that. So,
interesting, right? The discussion of this type of listening experience. And like, you know,
we have had that, I guess, to some degree with like radio for a long time where you can just like
turn this on and you can listen to it and you don't need to worry about like picking a track or
picking what vinyl record or CD you want to listen to or what have you. But it also resonated with
me because I think about how, you know, like a decade or so ago, I feel like I used to be much
more active in, you know, trying to find new music that I enjoyed. And it was right.
around the time of like the move to streaming that I started to find that like a lot more difficult
to do where I found it hard to do like with the streaming model. But that did also correspond with like
my life just getting busier and that being one of the things I felt like maybe I didn't have
enough time for but maybe also because the mechanism for how it worked or how people were listening
to music change that it felt more difficult to do that. Do you think that this lean back
experience is something that people were already looking for or do you think that the spot
Modify model, like encourage people to see that as the way that you listen much more often.
Yeah, I think that something that is helpful to, you know, keep in mind is the reasons why a
streaming service would be incentivized to prioritize lean back listening and why they would be
incentivized to maybe make that be the first thing that you see when you open the app be like
a series of playlist categories or, you know,
really convenient mixes optimized towards background listening.
Part of that is because this is actually something we talked about in 2020 also,
but streaming services like any other platforms are trying to boost engagement on their
platforms.
So playlists are a tool of boosting engagement.
You know, in the early years, these were playlists that were made by a team of in-house
curators.
There still are a small number of in-house curators employed in-house creators employed in-house
market by Spotify, but over the years has grown much more personalized, much more based on
showing you what is in your listening history, much more focused on maybe like the novelty
of something like an AI playlist or a day list. And the goal is engagement. Goal is like risk
management. They don't want to risk losing you as a subscriber. They're basically just trying to
show you whatever is statistically the thing that you are most likely to click on and
to keep streaming because success is something that is gleaned from the streams continuing to flow.
Lean back listening has always existed.
The whole history of radio is also, in some ways, a history of leadback listening.
I would argue maybe that changes when you start looking at things like community radio or
internet radio, a great example being a radio station that I really like W.O.
FMU. It's a like free form community radio station in New York City with a really, really
active, like, chat feed. And there actually are a ton of online radio stations that also have
these really active chat feeds that are sort of, I would argue, like a type of digital public
space where people are like listening to music and talking about it at the same time. And I just say
that to kind of push back on, you know, people always are like, oh, lean back listening has always
existed. Like, you know, look at the radio. But it's really like, again,
And, like, you know, we're always talking about not just technologies, but, like, the ways in which, you know, money and power and politics, like, circulate around them because even with radio, it's like, yeah, if you're talking about commercial corporate radio, like, yes, lean back listening has always existed. But if you're talking about independent and community and, like, freeform radio or radio that really caters to, like, people who are super into music, like, you look at something like the WFMU, like, constantly active, like, chat space on their website, like, this clear.
is not just a lean-back experience for, like, most of the dedicated listeners of the station.
Certainly, streaming did not, like, invent the concept of the lean-back listener, but I do think
that there are a lot of reasons why over the years, Spotify and other streaming services have
been, like, very incentivized to make this the mode of listening that is most championed on
their interface because it's the thing that's the most profitable for them.
And I guess that comes along with, like, the shift toward making playlists around moods.
and playlists that are algorithmically curated to ensure that people are constantly having these,
like, updated feeds that feel personalized to you, you know, regardless of how accurate that data is
or what they're actually doing behind the scenes. Can you talk about that move? And in particular,
you know, you mentioned there how this is more profitable, how the company then starts to target
music, license music, that it's going to be able to put in these types of playlists much more
cheaply to improve its bottom line.
I mean, I think that, you know, something that was really interesting for me.
I have this chapter in my book.
It's called The Conquest of Chill.
And it's kind of like about the concept of the chill playlist or the chill vibes playlist as this
streaming era phenomenon and trying to sort of historicize it and think about maybe why chill has
sort of like, you know, emerged in the streaming era as the kind of like millennial version of easy
listening, which is a type of radio that has existed for a very long time. And it's interesting
looking into like not just the broader history of mood music, the broader history of like new
technology formats, trying to sell themselves to users through the use of music being sold as a
tool of mood stabilization. I sort of historicize it or contextualize it as just a tactic of
advertising, you know, like advertisers and marketers, you know, it's like a classic tactic of
advertising playbook to cater to people's emotions, to cater to people's mood. So it kind of, in
some ways, it makes sense that like tech companies that don't know anything about music that
aren't interested in hiring people who know things about music, you know, who really aren't
interested in teaching you about music at all, who really just don't care about music,
would be seeking out more methods of engagement, like, outside of that.
A quote from the book that actually, like, really stuck with me was this one former Spotify
employee.
I was trying to understand, like, why did chill playlists become so popular?
Like, you know, I've been writing about this phenomenon of the chill playlist for so long,
but I still don't understand in some ways, like, why was it so popular?
And this person was just like, we made chill playlist because people consumed them.
And if you're a playlist curator and you have a new job at Spotify, you just want to kind of make
your metrics go up. You want to show that you're doing a good job. So you're going to make
playlists that are popular and show playlists were always popular. So we always just made them.
In some ways, it's like, you know, this incredibly boring reality that so many people who work at tech
companies are just tasked with moving a metric. And it's really like, you know, that's all that it is.
And I feel like that's something that came up both in conversations with editorial curators,
something that came up talking to a lot of former machine learning engineers.
Like, you know, it came up talking to people from across the companies.
You know, they would say things like, I know it might seem like these are kind of like nefarious decisions that are being made
or there might seem to be like something like kind of like, you know, grim.
But a lot of times it's just someone who has a job or their job is just to make this number increase.
And they're just like changing things around on the interface.
they're just curating things in certain ways to just make this number go up. It speaks to kind of like what happens when the only value is growth. And that's like the only thing that people are being tasked to care about. Yeah, it's so depressing to read about that. And like you have so many more examples of it in the book. But as you mentioned, you were talking about, you know, something that really resonated with you in that part of it. And there was a quote that I wrote down, The Conquest of Chill reflects an industry content to profit from a world of disconnection. I feel like that would resonate.
a lot with the people who listen to the show and the people who are concerned about, you know,
the broader impacts of what these services are having on the ways that we consume culture and
the ways that we think about culture. Have you seen that shift in the era of like generative
AI as well? These playlists feel like as they have become more reliant on license content and
on algorithmic feeds that they seem set up for the use of something like generative AI to
keep finding the next stage of this model. What have you seen over the past couple of years?
I mean, I think that all of the concerns around generative AI content, displacing the work
of real working musicians are really important and valid. You know, like as recently as last
week, we're just hearing the most like abysmal, depressing types of sentiments coming out of the
CEOs of generative AI music companies. Like, I'm not sure if you saw this.
quote floating around. It was the CEO of Suno, which is kind of one of the big
generative AI music or audio companies. And he's on this podcast saying, like, most people do
not like making music. Like you have to learn instruments. You have to get good at instruments.
You have to learn how to use production software. It's really hard. And it's just like, it's the
most like out of touch. It's like, yes, like learning to play music does require some effort. It
requires, like, having to want to learn how to play music, or you don't learn and you make
music and with a few simple chords. And that's what's beautiful about, like, folk music and punk
and, like, minimal music. And, like, you know, like, it's just so, like, out of touch from
what art is. So, like, absolutely, like, so many concerns with the generative AI space. So
many reasons to, you know, firmly believe that these people are like absolute villains
of culture and music and creativity and community.
I think for me and like the thing that I'm maybe equally concerned, if not like, more
concerned about is in addition to generative AI content, which kind of tends to get a lot
of attention and a lot of hype around it, is just the ways in which automated systems
and machine learning and algorithmic recommendation
over the past 15 plus years have shaped
not just the music and the sounds of music,
but how we understand music and how we relate to music
and how we form meaning around music
and our concept of what music is for in our lives.
So, you know, thinking about the ways
in which algorithmic recommendations
have come to increasingly influence
discovery feeds or recommendation feeds, how algorithmic decision-makings have come to shape the types
of words and phrases and terms that get used to describe music within the interface of a company
like Spotify and just like the kinds of connections that get made or don't made. There's a few
examples that are instructive, which is I think right now if you have a Spotify account
and you open Spotify, chances are like what you're going to see,
when you first open the feed is something called Daily Mix,
which is basically, you know, Spotify has a taste profile on you,
which is datified version of your music listening history,
maybe sorted into like different buckets
based on different types of stuff that you might listen to.
When you open the feed, you're getting these daily mixes.
And it basically looks like, just like, you know,
a bunch of mixes based on stuff you've listened to in the past.
And I think that even people I know who are discerning music fans,
who would never listen to generated AI music,
who are very, like, curious listeners, too,
could easily fall into just the habit of they open this app.
They think, oh, well, this is basically stuff I listen to already.
So, like, I'm just going to listen to this
because I recognize most of these artists and, like, yeah, sure, like, whatever, like hit play.
In doing so, it's kind of like, I think, a slippery slope
into developing listening behaviors around a recommendation pipeline
that is controlled by a company that has business objectives. So like, you know, Daily Mix,
for example, is like one of the places on the Spotify platform that is impacted by Discovery
mode, which is where, you know, musicians and labels can accept a lower royalty rate in exchange
for algorithmic promotion. So when you're listening to a Daily Mix, like a lot of the music that
you're being recommended is actually being recommended to you based on a pre-existing commercial
deal between Spotify and various rights holders that is, you know, totally unknown to you.
And because of that, there's also a lot of music that you're not being recommended because
it's people that are not participating in this Paola-like scheme, not actually Paola, but it has
some similarities with Paola. Another example of something that, like, you know, influenced by
tools of algorithmic recommendation and machine learning and AI that you might see when you open
the platform might be something like AI DJ, which is something that they, you know,
unveiled last year.
Sorry, at this point is probably two years ago.
AIDJ is sort of like partly the culmination of something that Spotify has been after for a while,
which, you know, if you look back over the past decade, interviews with executives for a really
long time, they've been after this thing where they want someone to be able to open the app
and just hit a play button.
This is something that like, you know, in 2018 when Spotify went public on the stock of
exchange, their co-president Gustav Soderstrom, talked about how Spotify's goal was self-driving
music. And even earlier, one of their first senior playlist executives talked about how the
goal was to just open the app and have one button that you press. So AIDJ is kind of something that
they rolled out where, yeah, you know, it's basically just a play button. And it plays you different
slices of different types of algorithmic recommendation. So there's not one, the algorithm. There's
all these different pools of data. There's all of these different models that are built using
these pools of data. And then there's different products that draw from these different
recommendation models. So AIDJ kind of like draws from these different recommendation models.
And it might be like, all right, like coming up next is some music you listens to in 2023 or
coming up next is some music from your release radar, which is like, you know, new music from
artists that you follow. And all right, now you're going to listen to, we're going to listen to a block
of songs that are metropopopolis, which is like a genre that they made up, stuff like that.
So it's like, and the voice that's in between the blocks of songs is a generative AI voice
trained on one of their employees.
I think the thing with AI DJ that gets at this thing that you were asking about, about
this kind of like alienated, isolated, like atomized way of related to culture, is that
it's such a good juxtaposition again with like, you know, what the experience of listening
to like an actual DJ might be.
You know, when you listen to the AI DJ, the voice in between the songs is never telling you this is the artist that is about to come up.
This is the album where this person's from. This is when they made this album.
And, you know, this is the label that it's on.
It's just, here's some songs that you really liked in 2022.
You're really going to see yourself in these.
Or it'll be like, here's some songs from your, like, you know, indie chill playlist or, you know, like, it's all about, like, how it fits into your taste profile.
it's not at all about pointing you out towards the world of music and culture and trying to make
connections and say like, all right, this next song came out in, you know, 1993 and it was on
this label and it was made by these two people working together. There's nothing actually about
culture or trying to fulfill, you know, the role that a DJ might historically play that is
more, you know, maybe educational or trying to actually kind of like introduce you to something.
So, you know, just like a couple examples of things that I think are examples of the ways in which the increasing algorithmic nature, hyper-personalized nature, AI-driven nature, you know, if you listen to interviews now, like even since I finished my book with Gustav Soderstrom, who like, you know, everyone's emphasis is always on Daniel Ack when they talk about Spotify, but there actually are other high-level executives, like Sodorstrom. There's so many podcast interviews with him. Like he does so much media and, like, is actually, like, is actually, like,
like another really interesting glimpse into the state of the company.
But he'll say things like, you know, when it comes to Spotify now, like the AI is the product.
And like, you know, meaning that the interface, when you open the app, you know, the ability to like have your whole listening profile and almost like in a concierge type way, like, you know, be recommending you like the perfect thing at the perfect moment, whether it's like a podcast or an audio book or your stuff in your listening history, like, you know, at least in this executive's perspective, he talks about that.
the thing that they're selling, and I think that that has a lot of consequences for people's
understanding of music. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. And I like your reframing of that.
So it's not just about generative AI and what has been happening for the past couple of years,
but, you know, this broader use over the past 10 or 15 years of machine learning, artificial
intelligence, all this kind of stuff, to really reshape not just how we interact with music,
but so many other things in society as these companies have been trying to do that. So I really
take your point on that. When it comes to the artist themselves, you know, we, we touched on this
earlier. Like, what is the effect of this? Because one of the things that you talked about in the
book, one of the things I remember reading about in the media was this change in the streaming
model that was pushed by Universal last year and, you know, the wider effects of that. But
meanwhile, on the other hand, how a lot of artists were pushing for a change in the streaming and
royalty model as well, but they were looking for something very different, right? The change to what
you call a user-centric royalty model. Can you talk about these two competing proposals and what
the effect of the newest direction of streaming has on artists and people who make music?
So for years, musicians and advocacy groups and musicians unions have been putting forth a proposal
for something called user-centric streaming. So currently, streaming royalties are
dictated by this incredibly complicated and convoluted system called pro rata, which is basically
this like really complicated revenue share system. But the basics of it is that payments are based
on market share or as they call it stream share. So if you're a rights holder, you're a record label
and your catalog amounts to, you know, maybe like 3% of all of the streams that happen on Spotify
in a given royalty period, then you would be entitled to 3% of the eligible royalty pool
per the terms of your contract with Spotify or whoever represents you.
So there's so many things that are complicated about this, one being that what the eligible
royalty pool is is different depending on your contracts with Spotify, and you know,
it's impossible to know what everyone's contracts are because they're all like completely
secretive.
But the basics that you hear from the music business are that like 52% of the revenue goes into this like pot that goes to recorded rights holders.
And then it's pro rata cut based on stream share.
The model that artists and unions and advocacy groups have put together is called user-centric where instead of this like really complicated system that is so confusing that most musicians actually struggle to understand and most listeners, if you ask, probably would have no idea what any of this is.
user-centric instead would just say, like, I am a Spotify user. I pay $10 a month. Spotify gets a 30%
cut, which, like, you know, they have since the beginning. And then the other 70% goes to the
artists that I stream. So, like, if I spend, you know, my whole month only listening to the band Lorraine,
then Lorraine should get my $7. That would be much more straightforward for musicians and users to
understand, I think. And it actually, you know, I have complicated feelings as expressed in the book
about the music industry's obsession with fraud and scammers. But it also would help to address some of
those issues, too, because if I set up an account and like from my account, I'm just like, you know,
leaving some AI music on repeat, like all night trying to like scam royalties for music made
by AI bots, like your $7 only goes so far, regardless of how much you stream.
So it would kind of help address some of the stuff with fraud also.
So there's a lot of reasons why this model makes sense, but instead, the major labels put
forth a different series of proposals, you know, supposedly aimed at like stomping out white
noise bots.
And as they very disrespectfully to most musicians also say that they're not just stamping
out scammers and bots, but also amateurs and hobbyists, which they're happy to sort of
throw under the bus with like all these AI fraudsters, which I think is highly problematic to
put all of those different types of musicians in the same pool as a problem. You know, in some
ways, I feel like the music industry has really kind of like waged a campaign against what they
see as like deprofessionalized musicians. Lots of complicating things to unpack there. You know,
even artists or musicians who are making music.
you know, a lot of musicians, on one hand, are pursuing professional careers and would like to
consider themselves professionals, but because of how it stacked against them the status quo of the
music business is, they're unable to, you know, reach the threshold to be considered, quote,
unquote, serious musicians in the system, and then to kind of like throw them in with the bots
and the scammers. I guess I should explain the universal music group proposed system suggests that, you know,
any artist or any track that generates less than a thousand streams per year just wouldn't get
paid at all. And then there are also like all types of other music that would be demonetized.
So like stuff that is considered non-music noise content. So like field recordings, ambient rain
sounds like white noise. You know, some of this like fair enough. Like there are a lot of people
out there that are like trying to kind of just like scam the system with like AI.
generated rain sounds and just to try to juice as many royalties as possible. And it makes sense
that they would be trying to seek a solution to that. But one other thing that I raise in the book
is that it also has consequences for artists that make music with field recordings. Like I
interviewed the director of Smithsonian Folkways, which is a legendary record label in the history
of American music that has, you know, existed for decades that considers itself to be stewards of an
archive of a lot of really like historically important field recordings and nature recordings.
And from their perspective, these are types of recordings that they never intended to get rich
from or that they never intended to be highly profitable undertakings, but that the positioning of
this material as, you know, spam is a disservice to the work that they try to do as responsible
stewards of the archive and also could have impacts on the ability of users to discover the material
within like the streaming landscape if it's being like deprioritized or considered yeah like spam
content that has to be dealt with. In addition to all of the things about the model that
independent musicians have concerns with, it's also just that the fact that the model was, you know,
created by universal music group, advanced by universal music group, universal music group piloted it
with Deezer first, which is a French streaming service. And then, according to reports in the
Financial Times, when they renegotiated their contracts with Spotify in the season following that,
they made it a requirement that Spotify adopt what they call artist-centric streaming. I think it
just further proves the influence that a company like Universal Music Group continues to have,
not just over like their relationship with Spotify, but over the entire streaming model beyond
and even just Spotify, you know, it's very risky when we start letting companies like Universal
Music Group and these big tech companies be determining like who is a serious artist and who is
an unprofessional hobbyist who doesn't deserve to make like any royalties at all for their
work. These are really slippery slopes, I think. Yeah, I can definitely see where the frustration
lies in that, right? You know, especially if you're an independent musician, making music that you
care about and a company like Universal or Sony or Warner has such a huge effect on.
on how you are going to get that music to people,
regardless of whether you're dealing with them at all.
But we've talked about a lot of the issues
with the streaming model and with Spotify,
in particular throughout this conversation.
And so I wanted to end off by asking you,
because at the end of the book,
you have a number of initiatives that people are trying
to take to push back against this model,
to try to envision something else,
not just to improve the streaming model
by increasing streaming rates or moving to a user-centric,
royalty model, but also thinking about how our relationship with music can be different. And I wonder what
you think is, you know, the best hope in some of those initiatives that you outline that really
resonate with you. Yeah, for sure. I mean, like I mentioned earlier, like I definitely think that the
kind of emerging new music labor movement, which I write about towards the end of the book, like in some
ways I find to be really inspiring for a lot of reasons, not only because it's so powerful to see, you know,
when I first started writing about Spotify and streaming, when my first articles came out around
2017, so many musicians were sort of, I don't know what to say, like, afraid to speak out
about Spotify and streaming, but were being told by their labels that they couldn't because
there was so much, like, fear of not getting editorial placements that would be the difference
between, like, getting, like, no money from streaming or, like, getting a somewhat, like,
you know, meaningful royalty check. There's a lot of sort of, like, fear of back.
from the services and I would have artists like DMing me saying like thanks for saying
the things that none of us feel like we can say and stuff like that. It would have been,
you know, hard to imagine how much things have now changed and to see how much it has changed
and that there have been, I think there's just a really strong instance of like, I think that's
what's happened is that a lot of musicians have like looked at the penny fractions that
they're paid by streaming services and realize that the power of a collective voice is worth more
than like the $2 royalty check that they might be getting per royalty period. And that has been really,
in my opinion, like really inspiring. And like it's a moment where the music business has really
pushed this idea of the musician influencer or the atomized content creator as the sort of model
independent musician. You know, we didn't really get into this as much. But there's a lot of ways in
which I think the royalty model has really like incentivized solo artists. Daniel F. talks about like
the model musician as this kind of like creative entrepreneur who is always sort of releasing
new music and has continuous engagement with their audience. You know, this is something he said
years ago, but I think it like holds up in looking at the types of artists that they sort of like
put forth in their marketing and in their sort of like Spotify for artist campaigns and things
like that. So at a moment when this sort of solo creative entrepreneur has been upheld as this
kind of like model musician, I think it's even more powerful that.
so many musicians are sort of like pushing back against that by forming not technically unions,
but these solidarity organizations. So in the United States, it's considered illegal for
independent contractors to unionize or do boycotts and musicians that fall into that category.
So for years, you know, musicians have been told like you can't collectively organize.
You can't form unions. It's illegal. You'll be deemed in a legal cartel. And there's actually a piece
of legislation called the Protect Working Musicians Act that specifically seeks to change that. In the book,
I have a chapter about Yuma, United Musicians and Allied Workers, and specifically this piece
of legislation that they've been working on the past couple of years with Congresswoman Rashida Talib
called the Living Wage for Musicians Act. And it's based on some pre-existing laws that already
exist around digital radio. It's rooted in a lot of research. It's rooted in examples of how something
like this could function. And it seeks to add an additional royalty on top of the pre-existing
streaming contracts that already exist so that musicians could get paid directly without the money
flowing through their rights holders or through their record labels to go directly to musicians.
So, you know, that type of thing, I think, is inspiring to me for lots of reasons, you know,
not just because of the bill itself, but because of the organizing work that it's really championed.
And the way in which I think it is kind of like helped musicians in some instances, like see the power of collect into organizing, maybe see themselves as workers or feel more comfortable, like talking about what they do that way.
What you talk about there reminds me a lot about how Amazon used to treat authors as well, right?
You know, kind of promoting this idea of a different kind of self-published author that is, you know, releasing books every like three months because that's what's going to work best for the algorithm.
Like another example of these platforms, you know, and using their.
forms of like algorithmic management for lack of a better word to like try to change how creative
people or artists you know see the work that they do whether it's in music or you know in writing
books and publishing or or what have you right i'm sure that they've been doing it in in the other
sectors too and it's always fantastic to see when these people are coming together to like push back
against a model like that but one of the other things that you talked about near the end of the
book and you know i'm a huge fan of libraries and think that they're just in a sense
piece of social infrastructure in our societies that feel like an example of like a bygone era.
Like you can hardly imagine our current political systems coming up with something like a library
and funding it. But because they're there, you know, we still have them. We need to defend them.
We need to expand them to make sure that something like that can grow. And you talked about
how libraries can also be this important piece of thinking about how we interact with local music
in particular in a very different way. Can you talk to us a bit about that to close off our conversation?
For sure. So after my part of my book about the new music labor movement, in my conclusion, I sort of outline a constellation of different ways in which perhaps we could like collectively imagine revaluing music. You know, in the streaming era, we talk so much about how music has been devalued, both financially, but then also in terms of the watering down of the relationship between listener and musician that has happened because of all this lean back listening.
and like algorithmic homogenization.
So what would it look like to revalue music?
So I talk a bit about like different musicians
working on like cooperative streaming services
and different things like that.
But also something that to me is like extremely inspiring,
not because it just represents like a completely different way
about thinking of the value of music in society,
but also because it's already happening is,
yeah, these examples of around the United States,
States and Canada, local public libraries, you know, local public libraries already offer in many
cases subscriptions to card holders for things like Kupla, which is like basically like, you know,
Spotify for the library. It's, you know, you'd be surprised how many like major releases you could
find on something like this. It's basically like a library version of Spotify or Apple Music or
something. But outside of, you know, those types of resources that many public,
libraries offer to card holders. There's also these instances of libraries launching these
local music streaming projects. So these really small-scale local music digital libraries
where they'll get together a group of people who are really invested in the local music scene
to act as curators. And then local musicians can send in their records. The local curators will
like each round pick a selection of local albums and then the library will license the music
directly from the artists for a set fee for a couple of years in order to create these
small scale but I think like really meaningful collections of digital music that anyone can
stream library card holders can download and it also to me is interesting because even though
these license fees in many cases like aren't a ton of money you know it's usually like two or
$300 to license the record for a couple of years, you know, you'd be surprised, like,
how much more impactful that could be than the number of streaming royalties an artist might
see from a streaming service in a similar number of times. It's not like changing anyone's life,
but it could be, you know, enough to like get a band in a studio, like, recording their next, like,
demo or single or it might be really helpful in, like, pressing a run of cassettes, you know,
like these types of resources, like, are not completely meaningless.
even if it might seem like a really small amount of money,
especially when you're talking about small-scale cultural production.
And something else about these projects that I think is really interesting to
is actually is a library in Canada in Edmonton.
I interviewed one of the librarians from the Edmonton Public Library
who have been really like instrumental in sort of like setting this context
within which a lot of other libraries have started viewing their projects,
which is like to not think of these just as digital music collection.
but as digital public spaces
and to think not just about this repository of music,
but also like all of the connections
that get built around this repository of music.
The library streaming projects are really interesting to me
for a bunch of reasons.
One of them is because, like mentioned earlier,
and as I'm sure, so many people who come on your show say,
you know, when you're criticizing technology
or when you're writing about technology,
you're rarely ever actually talking about the technology itself
and oftentimes what's being critiqued is power,
or what's being critiqued is capitalism or industry
or corporate consolidation,
or just really, you know, putting profit over people, you know?
Like, these are the things that you're criticizing.
And with the library streaming programs, you know, it's a great example.
Like, these are still instances of a collection of music
being held on a central server,
it being presented to people through an interface
that looks pretty similar, like Bandcamp or a streaming service.
And then, you know, using the internet to stream the music on your computer.
Like, in a lot of ways, the technology is actually kind of similar to these other streaming
services that we know.
But because they are being built in a lot of times alongside the communities that they're
meant to serve, taking in feedback from musicians, it's a great example of, like, how,
you know, these technologies that we rely on could look like so much different if they're
actually built with the people who rely on them in mind or even, you know, as partners working
together. Yeah, I love that so much. This is an example of how something, you know, that we interact
with every day can work very differently when organized around a different set of values. So I think
that's fantastic. You know, there's so much more we could have dug into, but mood machine is a great
book. I highly recommend people pick it up. Thanks so much for coming back on the show, Liz.
Thank you so much for having me.
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