The Culture Journalist
The Culture Journalist
Neil Young vs. Spotify Emergency Roundtable
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Neil Young vs. Spotify Emergency Roundtable

The internet's latest "free speech" imbroglio is just another symptom of a broken streaming economy.

Hi pals, 

We know we said that we were taking a pause from publishing as we cook up Season 3 of The Culture Journalist, but we couldn’t resist jumping back in for a quick one-off about a topic we just can’t shake: Neil Young (et al.) vs. Spotify. 

The TL;DR is that Young, on the heels of an open letter by a cadre of scientists, medical professionals, and academics, threatened to pull his catalog from the streaming giant last week if it didn’t do more to curtail the spread of misinformation surrounding COVID-19 and vaccines. He pointedly called for the removal of one of the platform’s biggest (and most lucrative) sources of said questionable material, The Joe Rogan Experience, writing in a letter to his team: “They can have Rogan or Young. Not both.” 

After Spotify chose to stand by Rogan, Young made good on his word (though he since deleted the above post from his Times-Contrarian website) and has since been directing his fans to check out his tunes on Spotify competitors like Amazon and Apple. Joni Mitchell, Nils Lofgren, and Graham Nash pulled their music as well, and the hashtag #cancelspotify enjoyed a day or two of virality. 

The situation is still unfolding, and it’s unclear what impact it will have on Spotify beyond a temporary stock price dip and anecdotal reports of users canceling their subscriptions. But the saga — shocker — proved to be a particularly spicy morsel of catnip for the culture wars, sparking arguments around free speech, censorship, and corporate responsibility that feel all the more vertiginous at a time when conservatives are attempting to ban books from school curricula and libraries across the country.

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All of which is to say, we’re pretty fired up. After years of observing how Spotify and its peers have impacted the lives of artists and the music industry as a whole, it feels vindicating to finally see the company receive a bit of (mainstream) scrutiny for its controversial business practices. But it’s also been frustrating to watch the reckoning play out in this particular way — like we’re seeing society collectively fixate on the symptoms of the problem and not the fundamental brokenness of a streaming economy that reduces everything it touches to a widget in its unstoppable quest for profit and growth. 

Join us as we contemplate how the fiasco feels like such a perfect storm of internet-era attentional dynamics, how crying “Ivermectin” on a podcast isn’t really that different from crying “fire” in a theater, and whether it’s time to revisit the notion that all the music in the world needs to be free and accessible to everyone, all the time. (At least, if we’re going to rely on for-profit companies to build the architecture that makes it possible).

Ps. If you have a moment to spare, we’d love it if you could help us out by answering a few questions about this podcast. 

Thanks,

love earth

be well

Emilie & Andrea 

Further reading and listening 

“Behind Neil Young vs. Spotify, a fraught relationship with musicians” (Ben Sisaro)

“Spotify’s Joe Rogan problem isn’t going away” (Kevin Roose)

“There’s no such thing as independent music in the age of coronavirus” (Emilie Friedlander)

“How easy is it for musicians to walk away from problematic artists?” (Andrea Domanick)

“Spotify drops ‘hate content’ policy for artist promotions after controversy” (Todd Spangler)

“What is creativity worth?” (with UMAW’s Joey la Neve Defrancesco) 

UMAW’s Justice at Spotify campaign

“My young mind was disturbed by a book. It changed my life.” (Viet Thanh Nguyen)

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A prescient musical interlude by Blur c. 1995.

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The Culture Journalist
The Culture Journalist
Cathartic conversations about culture in the age of platforms, with Emilie Friedlander and Andrea Domanick