An Academic’s View: Why This Spotify Boycott “Feels Different”

by admin477351

According to Eric Drott, a professor of music at the University of Texas at Austin, the latest wave of artists leaving Spotify signals a significant shift in the power dynamics of the streaming era. While casual observers might lump this in with previous high-profile boycotts, Drott argues that this new movement “feels different” due to the changing motivations and economic realities of independent artists.
For years, the implicit agreement was that musicians would tolerate low streaming royalties in exchange for the visibility the platform provided. “Artists knew streaming wouldn’t make them rich but needed the visibility,” Drott explains. This trade-off, however, is no longer seen as viable by a growing number of creators.
The key change, according to Drott, is the platform’s extreme saturation. With hundreds of thousands of tracks uploaded every week, the promise of discovery has become increasingly hollow. “Now there’s so much music out there, people are questioning whether it’s doing much for them,” he says. The potential reward of being discovered no longer outweighs the definite costs of low pay and ethical compromises.
This new wave is led by artists who are less famous but perhaps more in tune with the day-to-day realities of being a working musician. They are not legacy acts with established fortunes but creators who are actively trying to build sustainable careers. Their decision to leave is less a symbolic gesture and more a pragmatic pivot to a direct-to-fan model that offers a more reliable path to financial stability.
Drott’s analysis suggests that this is not a fleeting protest but a structural shift. The fundamental value proposition of Spotify for emerging artists is collapsing. As more musicians come to the same conclusion, this “different” feeling could evolve into a permanent and significant fissure in the streaming landscape.

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