Parle Mag
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Interviews
  • Contact Us
  • Team Parlé
  • Podcast
  • Advertising
Facebook 0 Likes
Twitter 0 Followers
Instagram 0 Followers
LinkedIn 0
TikTok 0
0
0
0
0
0
Parle Mag
Subscribe
Parle Mag
  • Home
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movies
    • TV
    • Sports
    • Books
    • Celebrity
  • Lifestyle
    • Beauty
    • Business
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Op-Ed
    • Politics
    • Relationships
    • Travel
  • Interviews
Featured Categories
- The Latest
336 Posts
View Posts
black countries
About Parlé
1 Posts
View Posts
Taye Diggs reads a book in an episode of private practice.
About Parle Magazine
2 Posts
View Posts
About the Editor
2 Posts
View Posts
Posts
  • Diddy Sues NBC for Defamation, Files $100 Million Lawsuit 1
    Diddy Sues NBC for Defamation, Files $100 Million Lawsuit 
    • February 12, 2025
  • Sy Ari da Kid interview 2
    [INTERVIEW] The Evolution Of Sy Ari da Kid – The Prolific Artist Opens Up About New Album & More
    • February 7, 2025
  • Shows like Abbott Elementary including Act Your Age on Netflix 3
    Love Abbott Elementary? Here Are 5 Other Shows That You Will Love
    • February 7, 2025
  • Diddy Sues NBC for Defamation, Files $100 Million Lawsuit

    Diddy Sues NBC for Defamation, Files $100 Million Lawsuit 

    • February 12, 2025
    View Post
  • Sy Ari da Kid interview

    [INTERVIEW] The Evolution Of Sy Ari da Kid – The Prolific Artist Opens Up About New Album & More

    • February 7, 2025
    View Post
  • Shows like Abbott Elementary including Act Your Age on Netflix

    Love Abbott Elementary? Here Are 5 Other Shows That You Will Love

    • February 7, 2025
    View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Lifestyle

The Backlash Against Spotify Isn’t Just About Joe Rogan

  • March 14, 2022
  • Team Parle
Backlash Against Spotify
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0
0

In recent weeks you may well have noticed, it would be hard not to have, that Spotify has had something of a public relations problem. The most recent news stories have surrounded the behavior of one of their biggest assets, podcaster Joe Rogan, and his propensity to have guests on his show who echo a few very worn-out conspiracy theories in relation to the coronavirus pandemic.

The reaction to Rogan’s behavior even led to a number of artists pulling their musical output from the Spotify library, but it is important to note that anger towards the streaming behemoth goes a lot deeper than this latest issue.  The backlash against Spotify starts with Joe Rogan, but it surely doesn’t end there. 

That Whole Joe Rogan Mess Explained

Advertisement

Spotify paid Joe Rogan the massive sum of around $200 million to run his podcast via their channel and, in doing so, simultaneously signed up a hugely popular broadcaster and also put YouTube’s nose out of joint into the bargain.

The deal showed just how much money there was to be made in the podcast arena and also just how much Spotify had to offer him, which is down in no small way to the fact that they manage to make a very large sum from the streaming of music while offering the musicians whose music they use a relatively small portion of the pot. 

Rogan is no stranger to controversy, and his show often puts people’s backs out of joint, and his recent guests, a number of them, were seen to further a narrative around the coronavirus pandemic that was caused great consternation by the scientific and medical communities. In allowing these views to be played out on his show, played to millions of impressionable people among his audience, you could argue (and many have) that Rogan was harming the efforts to beat the virus or at the very least help to stem its flow.

Advertisement

As well as scientists and medical professionals being angry with Rogan, there were a number of major musicians who were so incensed by the fact that Spotify gave the podcaster his platform and seemed indifferent to his attitude to such a big issue. Among those were Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, the pair have a commonality in that they both suffered from polio before the vaccine for the disease was commonplace, so they clearly had a personal issue with what was occurring.

To Rogan’s credit, he came out and made a seemingly genuine apology, but Spotify’s problems do not begin and end with the 54-year-old former UFC commentator. 

 

Advertisement

The Bigger Picture In Terms of Anger Aimed at Spotify

Musicians in 2022 struggle to make a living, far more so than at any point in recent history, and Spotify certainly is part of the problem and not the solution in terms of that particular pickle.

There was a time when musicians would secure a living through selling physical music in the form of CDs, cassette tape, and vinyl records, but that time has (for the most part) passed, and now musicians must find other ways to make a living.

Advertisement

Prior to the pandemic, live shows were booming, and artists, especially big established acts, would make the lion’s share of their revenue from big sold-out shows, but the coronavirus put a full stop to that for the best part of two years and even now things aren’t anywhere near the way they were before.

Musicians can now look to use avenues like royalty-free music, where they can sell their output, be that song samples of SFX (sound effects) to providers who then offer it to subscribers to use in their projects (from feature films to social media posts). 

 

Advertisement

Streaming Services Are the Enemy

Music streaming services, and not traditional radio airplay, are where the masses listen to music, and on the whole, the level of compensation paid to bands, musicians, rappers, singers, and entertainers of all varieties is poor. 

On top of the fact that the amount of money that acts can make from such services, they are also seen as very much biased towards the top-end artists, making it next to impossible for lesser-known artists to get a look in.

Advertisement

Many who are not in the music industry would be shocked to learn of how much Spotify pays artists for their streams. In 2019, many sources reported that the amount they pay to musical acts worked out at around $0.0033 per stream. In other words, artists who secured one million streams of a track would earn the princely amount of $3300. 

Of course, an act can choose not to be on the service, but that would be akin to cutting off your nose to spite your face. Spotify is a company that made approx $600 million in profits in 2020, so one can see how such a payment scheme would look unfair to many.

There is also the argument that big artists like Adele have made that Spotify (and other major streaming services) are ruining the sales of albums or even the concept of them at all. After all, they just randomly play single songs as opposed to entire albums as it’s not part of their business model to treat music as part of a larger structure. 

Advertisement

On the other hand, Spotify is popular with users, so you could argue that they are merely giving people what they want. Also, there are some who claim, perhaps bizarrely, that Spotify (and others like Apple Music) has actually saved the music industry.

 

Spotify, and Others, Have Saved the Music Industry…

Advertisement

There is some credence to that claim, but it’s a little tricky to unpick. When the internet age first kicked in, there was a raft of fraudulent paths to take if people wanted to download and listen to music without having paid any money to the relevant artist. There were efforts to prevent this, but on the whole, they were unsuccessful.

Streaming services offered users the chance to listen to high-quality music; for a lot less than the price of individual downloading songs from Apple or elsewhere, and in doing so, they created a different path for music lovers and one that did at least offer some level of revenue to musicians, albeit a lot less than they deserve. 

This is not a view that a great many have, and on the whole, it’s agreed that Spotify should be offering musicians a larger slice of their pie; after all, without the music, they’d have nothing to stream to their millions of users in the first place.

Advertisement

Readers Might Also Like:

India Arie pulls music from Spotify
India.Arie Is The Latest Artist To Pull Their Music From Spotify
Deja Haugabook
Mike & Deja Haugabook: Where Is the Viral Couple Months Later?

Nicole Remy The Courtship series
10 Fun Facts About Nicole Remy, Star of NBC’s ‘The Courtship’
Wrath Movie - A Seven Deadly Sins Story
[FIRST LOOK] Lifetime To Air ‘Wrath’ Starring Michelle Williams, Romeo & Tina Knowles-Lawson

Advertisement

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Share 0
Related Topics
  • Backlash Against Spotify
Team Parle

The collective team of Parlé Magazine. Twitter: @parlemag

Previous Article
Kanye Shares Pete Davidson Text Messages
  • Celebrity Drama
  • Entertainment News

ICYMI: Kanye Shares Pete Davidson’s Text Messages and more

  • March 14, 2022
  • Chelsea A. Hamlet
View Post
Next Article
Normani Fair Single
  • Entertainment News
  • New Music Releases
  • R & B singles
  • Singles

[WATCH] Normani Performs “Fair” on Jimmy Fallon

  • March 14, 2022
  • Kevin Benoit
View Post
You May Also Like
Best Super Bowl Halftime Performances Since 2000
View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

Ranking The Best Super Bowl Halftime Performances From The Last 25 Years

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • February 2, 2025
Aquarius Celebrities Megan Thee Stallion
View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Celebrity Profiles
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

Unique and Creative: Here Are 12 Aquarius Celebrities You Should Know

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • January 19, 2025
Revisiting The XXL 2018 Freshmen Class
View Post
  • Artists
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Celebrity Profiles
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

Revisiting XXL Freshmen of the Past | 2018’s Freshmen Class – Where Are They Now?

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • January 18, 2025
XXL Freshman 2007 - Every XXL Freshman cover
View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

Every XXL Freshman Cover Since 2007

  • Nia Bennett
  • January 17, 2025
Nearest Green Distillery Experience
View Post
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel

The Nearest Green Distillery Experience: Where Live Music, History, & Whiskey Intertwine

  • Tomeka Allgood
  • January 13, 2025
John Legend Capricorn Celebrities
View Post
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

These Capricorn Celebrities Are As Solid As Their Earth Sign

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • January 13, 2025
new movies coming in 2025
View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle
  • Television News

A New Snow White? New Marvel Releases? Here’s The New Movies Coming In 2025

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • January 12, 2025
Kanye West and Jay-Z Relationship Timeline
View Post
  • Blogs/Editorials
  • Celebrity Drama
  • Entertainment News
  • Lifestyle

From Friends To Former Business Partners: How The Kanye West and Jay-Z Relationship Soured

  • Ayanna Kelley
  • January 11, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts
  • Gregory Jenkins: The Visionary Behind Pink Lemonade’s Upcoming Launch on Tubi
    • February 7, 2025
  • Could There Be a Spinoff to FX's "Snowfall" in the Works? Here's What We Know
    Could There Be a Spinoff to FX’s “Snowfall” in the Works? Here’s What We Know
    • February 6, 2025
  • Teyana Taylor as Dionne Warwick
    Teyana Taylor as Dionne Warwick — Will the Biopic Happen?
    • February 5, 2025
Categories
Entertainment News
4788 Posts
View Posts
Interviews
654 Posts
View Posts
Lifestyle
2912 Posts
View Posts
Advertisement
Clinical Trials Webinar Ad Footer
Parle Mag
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Team Parlé
  • Podcast
  • Advertising
  • Parle Endeavors
  • Parle New York
  • Privacy Policy
parlemag.com - The Voice of The Culture

Input your search keywords and press Enter.