Spotify removes Neil Young music in feud over Joe Rogan’s false Covid claims
Musician has condemned misinformation on platform’s
top podcast, saying ‘they can have Rogan or Young’
Maya Yang
and Ben Beaumont-Thomas
Thu 27 Jan
2022 12.26 GMT
The music
streaming platform Spotify is in the process of removing Neil Young’s music
after the company refused to take down Joe Rogan’s podcast amid the musician’s
objections that it spread vaccine misinformation.
Rogan has
been described by the New York Times as “one of the most consumed media
products on the planet”. His podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience, is Spotify’s
most popular. In 2020, Rogan signed a $100m deal that gave the streaming
company exclusive rights to the show.
But this
week, Young posted an open letter to his manager and record label that was
later taken down in which he said: “With an estimated 11 million listeners per
episode, [The Joe Rogan Experience], which is hosted exclusively on Spotify, is
the world’s largest podcast and has tremendous influence. Spotify has a
responsibility to mitigate the spread of misinformation on its platform, though
the company presently has no misinformation policy.”
The
musician added: “I want you to let Spotify know immediately TODAY that I want
all my music off their platform … They can have Rogan or Young. Not both.”
A Spotify
spokesperson confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday that the platform
was taking down Young’s music.
“We want
all the world’s music and audio content to be available to Spotify users. With
that comes great responsibility in balancing both safety for listeners and
freedom for creators. We have detailed content policies in place and we’ve
removed over 20,000 podcast episodes related to Covid since the start of the
pandemic. We regret Neil’s decision to remove his music from Spotify, but hope
to welcome him back soon,” the spokesperson said.
Since the
pandemic, Rogan, who has legions of devoted followers, has repeatedly spread
misleading and false claims. This month, 270 doctors, scientists, healthcare
professionals and professors wrote an open letter to Spotify, expressing
concern about medical misinformation on Rogan’s podcast.
The letter
highlighted a highly controversial episode from December that features Robert
Malone, a virologist who was involved in the mRNA vaccine technology that led
to some of the leading Covid-19 vaccines but has since been criticised for
spreading vaccine misinformation.
“This is
not only a scientific or medical concern; it is a sociological issue of
devastating proportions and Spotify is responsible for allowing this activity
to thrive on its platform,” the letter read.
In the wake
of the catalogue deletion announcement, Young posted a new message on his
website further castigating Spotify as “the home of life-threatening Covid
misinformation. Selling lies for money.”
He said he
made the decision because of worries that young Spotify users were
“impressionable and easy to swing to the wrong side of the truth. These people
believe Spotify would never present grossly unfactual information. They
unfortunately are wrong. I knew I had to try to point that out.”
Various
figures – including Donald Trump Jr – had pointed out that Young no longer had
control over his master recordings after he sold a 50% stake to the publishing
company Hipgnosis in January 2021. Young admitted he was “reminded by my own
legal forces that contractually I did not have control of my music”, and
acknowledged that his record label, Reprise, owned by Warner Music Group,
allowed the music to be removed.
“Thank you
Warner Brothers for standing with me and taking the hit – losing 60% of my
worldwide streaming income in the name of the truth,” he wrote.
He pointed
fans towards rivals such as Amazon Music and Apple Music while criticising
Spotify for “continuing to peddle the lowest quality in music reproduction”,
and thanked those who had praised his stand against the company: “I have never
felt so much love coming from so many.”
Alongside
snark from rightwing commentators, there was public support for Young’s
decision, including from another Canadian musician, the rapper Cadence Weapon,
who said: “Thank you Neil Young for your leadership. It will take principled
sacrifice by the bigger artists who can afford to take the hit for things to
start improving for the rest of us.”
The
Republican Kentucky senator Rand Paul reworked lyrics to Young’s song Hey Hey,
My My (Into the Black) in a tweet criticising him – though it could easily be
read as praise. “Bye Bye, Hey Hey / Neil Young is gone today / It’s better to
boycott / Than to just obey,” Paul wrote. “Even though [Neil Young’s] Ohio is
one of the greatest protest songs of all time, free speech is kinda important
also.”
Spotify removes Neil Young music in feud over Joe
Rogan’s false Covid claims
Musician has condemned misinformation on platform’s
top podcast, saying ‘they can have Rogan or Young’
Maya Yang
and Ben Beaumont-Thomas
Thu 27 Jan
2022 12.26 GMT
The music
streaming platform Spotify is in the process of removing Neil Young’s music
after the company refused to take down Joe Rogan’s podcast amid the musician’s
objections that it spread vaccine misinformation.
Rogan has
been described by the New York Times as “one of the most consumed media
products on the planet”. His podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience, is Spotify’s
most popular. In 2020, Rogan signed a $100m deal that gave the streaming
company exclusive rights to the show.
But this
week, Young posted an open letter to his manager and record label that was
later taken down in which he said: “With an estimated 11 million listeners per
episode, [The Joe Rogan Experience], which is hosted exclusively on Spotify, is
the world’s largest podcast and has tremendous influence. Spotify has a
responsibility to mitigate the spread of misinformation on its platform, though
the company presently has no misinformation policy.”
The
musician added: “I want you to let Spotify know immediately TODAY that I want
all my music off their platform … They can have Rogan or Young. Not both.”
A Spotify
spokesperson confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday that the platform
was taking down Young’s music.
“We want
all the world’s music and audio content to be available to Spotify users. With
that comes great responsibility in balancing both safety for listeners and
freedom for creators. We have detailed content policies in place and we’ve
removed over 20,000 podcast episodes related to Covid since the start of the
pandemic. We regret Neil’s decision to remove his music from Spotify, but hope
to welcome him back soon,” the spokesperson said.
Since the
pandemic, Rogan, who has legions of devoted followers, has repeatedly spread
misleading and false claims. This month, 270 doctors, scientists, healthcare
professionals and professors wrote an open letter to Spotify, expressing
concern about medical misinformation on Rogan’s podcast.
The letter
highlighted a highly controversial episode from December that features Robert
Malone, a virologist who was involved in the mRNA vaccine technology that led
to some of the leading Covid-19 vaccines but has since been criticised for
spreading vaccine misinformation.
“This is
not only a scientific or medical concern; it is a sociological issue of
devastating proportions and Spotify is responsible for allowing this activity
to thrive on its platform,” the letter read.
In the wake
of the catalogue deletion announcement, Young posted a new message on his
website further castigating Spotify as “the home of life-threatening Covid
misinformation. Selling lies for money.”
He said he
made the decision because of worries that young Spotify users were
“impressionable and easy to swing to the wrong side of the truth. These people
believe Spotify would never present grossly unfactual information. They
unfortunately are wrong. I knew I had to try to point that out.”
Various
figures – including Donald Trump Jr – had pointed out that Young no longer had
control over his master recordings after he sold a 50% stake to the publishing
company Hipgnosis in January 2021. Young admitted he was “reminded by my own
legal forces that contractually I did not have control of my music”, and
acknowledged that his record label, Reprise, owned by Warner Music Group,
allowed the music to be removed.
“Thank you
Warner Brothers for standing with me and taking the hit – losing 60% of my
worldwide streaming income in the name of the truth,” he wrote.
He pointed
fans towards rivals such as Amazon Music and Apple Music while criticising
Spotify for “continuing to peddle the lowest quality in music reproduction”,
and thanked those who had praised his stand against the company: “I have never
felt so much love coming from so many.”
Alongside
snark from rightwing commentators, there was public support for Young’s
decision, including from another Canadian musician, the rapper Cadence Weapon,
who said: “Thank you Neil Young for your leadership. It will take principled
sacrifice by the bigger artists who can afford to take the hit for things to
start improving for the rest of us.”
The
Republican Kentucky senator Rand Paul reworked lyrics to Young’s song Hey Hey,
My My (Into the Black) in a tweet criticising him – though it could easily be
read as praise. “Bye Bye, Hey Hey / Neil Young is gone today / It’s better to
boycott / Than to just obey,” Paul wrote. “Even though [Neil Young’s] Ohio is
one of the greatest protest songs of all time, free speech is kinda important
also.”
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