this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2025
175 points (97.8% liked)
BuyFromEU
2114 readers
341 users here now
Welcome to BuyFromEU - A community dedicated to supporting European-made goods and services!
We also invite you to subscribe to:
Logo generated with mistral le chat Banner by Christian Lue on unsplash.com
founded 2 weeks ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I've had enough of Spotify's anti-artist practices since being an early adopter, I pay for a premium family account and I'm ready and willing to jump to any service with a not-narrow range of music that treats artists better. I'd rather not just sail the seven seas cuz I find the management of it all annoying, but I'm real irritated with Spotify and ready to consider maybe even that if there's just nothing else.
as far as I know there's no streaming platform that treats artists great, like great as in anyone can come along and start making a living making music even if you only have 1000 listeners because quite frankly it's too easy to make music these days:
https://variety.com/2022/music/news/new-songs-100000-being-released-every-day-dsps-1235395788/
If this was the 1950's and there was like 100 million people listening to 100,000 artists then yeah, most would probably get paid well but this is the onlyfans era of music, 99% of people make fuck all and a few big superstars make a shitload
The good news is that streaming giants like Spotify do payout quite a bit, so while you feel like you're not supporting artists enough, tbh you are doing quite a lot as part of a larger group:
https://www.techspot.com/news/106538-spotify-10-billion-payout-2024-signals-renewed-appreciation.html
If you want to support them even more then yeah, best thing to do is buy their vinyl records/merch etc
Thanks very much for the well thought out (and sourced) response!
I occasionally watch videos by a YouTuber named Benn Jordan (just a coincidence with my own Lemmy username to be clear), and he gives what look like pretty damning arguments to me that the numbers Spotify is publishing are misleading and not telling the whole story, and that their treatment of artists over time is growing worse.
Here's one of the videos I think I remember being fairly compelling - https://youtu.be/gDfNRWsMRsU?si=p5EVxsFaAU6MsQjT
I thought there was a more recent one but I'm not finding it. Anyway with that said, I've got no dog in this fight and I only watch some of that stuff recreationally, I lack a ton of info.