Massive Attack to Pull Music From Spotify in All Territories

Massive Attack is the latest artist to pull their music from Spotify in all territories. The trip-hop duo shared the news on Thursday (Sep. 18) via a post on their Instagram. 

The group announced they were a part of the ‘No Music For Genocide’ initiative which has seen over 400 artists and labels request that their music is removed from DSPs (digital service platforms) in Israel. Joining them include artists Faye Webster, Arca, MIKE, Japanese Breakfast and more.

Related

The duo’s statement then adds that they have requested that Universal Music Group remove their music from Spotify in all territories, owing to reported investments made by the streaming service’s CEO Daniel Ek through his investment fund Prima Materia. Since 2021, Prima Materia has been investing in Helsing, a defense company that sells AI software to inform military decisions. 

The band wrote, “Unconnected to this initiative & in light of the (reported) significant investments by its CEO in a company producing military munition drones & Al technology integrated into fighter aircraft, Massive Attack have made a separate request to our label that our music be removed from the Spotify streaming service in all territories.”

The band has released a number of LPs via Universal’s Virgin Records, including 1991’s Blue Lines and 1997’s Mezzanine; their last album, Heligoland, was released in 2010. Universal Music has been approached for comment on the request. At time of press, the group’s music remains on the service.

Related

The Spotify app is displayed on a smartphone screen.

The group’s statement provided additional context for their decision to join the No Music For Genocide initiative. “In our view, the historic precedent of effective artist action during apartheid South Africa and the apartheid, war crimes and genocide now being committed by the state of Israel renders the “No Music For Genocide” campaign imperative,” the group wrote.

“In the separate case of Spotify, the economic burden that has long been placed on artists is now compounded by a moral & ethical burden, whereby the hard-earned money of fans & the creative endeavours of musicians ultimately funds lethal, dystopian technologies. Enough is more than enough. Another way is possible.” 

Massive Attack are the latest act to withdraw their music from Spotify, following King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Xiu Xiu, Hotline TNT and more.



Source link

Hot this week

How to Make Storytelling Work for Your Brand

Marketing Podcast with Kyle GrayPodcast Transcript My guest for this...

Manhart Upgrades The Base BMW X6 With Way More Power

Manhart made a name for itself by modifying BMW...

David Gilmour Celebrates as Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here Is UK’s Christmas No. 1 Album

Pink Floyd’s 1975 album Wish You Were Here has...

German court jails man for drugging, raping and filming wife for years

Getty ImagesGerman media say the case bears similarities to...

Americans Are Increasingly Convinced That Aliens Have Visited Earth

Americans are becoming more open to the idea that...

Topics

DS hints at 3 replacement that ‘invents’ a segment

DS boss Xavier Peugeot has hinted that a replacement...

Song Exploder – Air

“Playground Love” (feat. Gordon Tracks) The band Air is a...

French Christmas Cookies (Sablés) Recipe

Biscuits de Noël Laurence is one of my best and...

Tata Sierra bookings cross 70,000 on first day

Tata Motors have amassed over 70,000 confirmed bookings for...

The Oscars Head to YouTube

The Oscars are coming to YouTube. After decades airing...

Holiday Baking Beyond Cookies

Few people love baking holiday cookies more than me,...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img