Does it have an index? @LizPelly’s Must-Read Investigation in “Mood Machine” Raises Deep Questions About Spotify’s Financial Integrity

Spotify Playlist Editors

If you don’t know of Liz Pelly, I predict you soon will. I’ve been a fan for years but I really think that her latest work, Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, coming in January by One Signal Publishers, an imprint of Atria Books at Simon & Schuster, will be one of those before and after books. Meaning the world you knew before reading the book was radically different than the world you know afterward. It is that insightful. And incriminating.

We are fortunate that Ms. Pelly has allowed Harper’s to excerpt Mood Machine in the current issue. I want to suggest that if you are a musician or care about musicians, or if you are at a record label or music publisher, or even if you are in the business of investing in music, you likely have nothing more important to do today than read this taste of the future.

The essence of what Ms. Pelly has identified is the intentional and abiding manipulation of Spotify’s corporate playlists. She explains what called her to write Mood Machine:

Spotify, the rumor had it, was filling its most popular playlists with stock music attributed to pseudonymous musicians—variously called ghost or fake artists—presumably in an effort to reduce its royalty payouts. Some even speculated that Spotify might be making the tracks itself. At a time when playlists created by the company were becoming crucial sources of revenue for independent artists and labels, this was a troubling allegation.

What you will marvel at is the elaborate means Ms. Pelly has discovered–through dogged reporting worthy of the great deadline artists–that Spotify undertook to deceive users into believing that playlists were organic. And, it must be said, to deceive investors, too. As she tells us:

For years, I referred to the names that would pop up on these playlists simply as “mystery viral artists.” Such artists often had millions of streams on Spotify and pride of place on the company’s own mood-themed playlists, which were compiled by a team of in-house curators. And they often had Spotify’s verified-artist badge. But they were clearly fake. Their “labels” were frequently listed as stock-music companies like Epidemic, and their profiles included generic, possibly AI-generated imagery, often with no artist biographies or links to websites. Google searches came up empty.

You really must read Ms. Pelly’s except in Harper’s for the story…and did I say the book itself is available for preorder now?

All this background manipulation–undisclosed and furtive manipulation by a global network of confederates–was happening while Spotify devoted substantial resources worthy of a state security operation into programming music in its own proprietary playlists. That programmed music not only was trivial and, to be kind, low brow, but also essentially at no cost to Spotify. It’s not just that it was free, it was free in a particular way. In Silicon Valley-speak, Ms. Pelly has discovered how Spotify disaggregated the musician from the value chain.

What she has uncovered has breathtaking implications, particularly with the concomitant rise of artificial intelligence and that assault on creators. The UK Parliament’s House of Commons Digital, Culture, Media & Sport Committee’s Inquiry into the Economics of Music Streaming quoted me as saying “If a highly trained soloist views getting included on a Spotify “Sleep” playlist as a career booster, something is really wrong.” That sentiment clearly resonated with the Committee, but was my feeble attempt at calling government’s attention to then-only-suspected playlist grift that was going on at Spotify. Ms. Pelly’s book is a solid indictment–there’s that word again–of Spotify’s wild-eyed, drooling greed and public deception.

Ms. Pelly’s work raises serious questions about streaming payola and its fellow-travelers in the annals of crime. The last time this happened in the music business was with Fred Dannen’s 1991 book called Hit Men that blew the lid off of radio payola. That book also sent record executives running to unfamiliar places called “book stores” but for a particular reason. They weren’t running to read the book. They already knew the story, sometimes all too well. They were running to see if their name was in the index.

Like the misguided iHeart and Pandora “steering agreements” that nobody ever investigated which preceded mainstream streaming manipulation, it’s worth investigating whether Spotify’s fakery actually rises to the level of a kind of payola or other prosecutable offense. As the noted broadcasting lawyer David Oxenford observed before the rise of Spotify:

The payola statute, 47 USC Section 508, applies to radio stations and their employees, so by its terms it does not apply to Internet radio (at least to the extent that Internet Radio is not transmitted by radio waves – we’ll ignore questions of whether Internet radio transmitted by wi-fi, WiMax or cellular technology might be considered a “radio” service for purposes of this statute). But that does not end the inquiry. Note that neither the prosecutions brought by Eliot Spitzer in New York state a few years ago nor the prosecution of legendary disc jockey Alan Fried in the 1950s were brought under the payola statute. Instead, both were based on state law commercial bribery statutes on the theory that improper payments were being received for a commercial advantage. Such statutes are in no way limited to radio, but can apply to any business. Thus, Internet radio stations would need to be concerned.

Ms. Pelly’s investigative work raises serious questions of its own about the corrosive effects of fake playlists on the music community including musicians and songwriters. She also raises equally serious questions about Spotify’s financial reporting obligations as a public company.

For example, I suspect that if Spotify were found to be using deception to boost certain recordings on its proprietary playlists without disclosing this to the public, it could potentially raise issues under securities laws, including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX). SOX requires companies to maintain accurate financial records and disclose material information that could affect investors’ decisions.

Deceptive practices that mislead investors about the company’s performance or business practices could be considered a violation of SOX. Additionally, such actions could lead to investigations by regulatory bodies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and potential legal consequences.

Imagine that risk factor in Spotify’s next SEC filing? It might read something like this:


Risk Factor: Potential Legal and Regulatory Actions

Spotify is currently under investigation for alleged deceptive practices related to the manipulation of Spotify’s proprietary playlists. If these allegations are substantiated, Spotify could face significant legal and regulatory actions, including fines, penalties, and enforcement actions by regulatory bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Such actions could result in substantial financial liabilities, damage to our reputation, and a loss of user trust, which could adversely affect our business operations and financial performance.


One thought on “Does it have an index? @LizPelly’s Must-Read Investigation in “Mood Machine” Raises Deep Questions About Spotify’s Financial Integrity

  1. I released 21 songs in July that I wrote and recorded in may/June. Those songs were the first songs I had ever completely finished and released. After two and a half months I had amassed 2300 monthly listeners across 74 countries and had 11000 streams on Spotify. I was working around the clock to write, record and finalize more songs along with promoting my music on every social media I could download on my phone. I was using BandLab as my distributor because I use their app for recording and have been using their app for years now with no issues until I received an email from them saying that I had violated their policy and that all my music was being removed from streaming services and that my account was suspended and I was banned from BandLab. I contacted Spotify to try to resolve the issue but was told to contact BandLab so I did. They told me that my streams and listeners were fraudulent (manually manipulated ) so I took a week and collected 600 screenshots from all my social accounts, hand wrote notes , as well as organizing them into the respective accounts. I also took the time to count all the views from each account(25000 views across all platforms I was using)to help speed up the process but after a couple weeks I had not received any updates from BandLab except for an email saying they were closing the chat. I screenshot the last message from them before that showing when I was told to hang tight that they would get back to me if they needed more information or came up with a decision. Their response was that their decision was final and that my account would stay suspended but I would still be able to use it for personal use. I also had gained almost 300 followers on BandLab and 1200 plays sense the release of my first song. I was truly growing organically and pretty quickly for a new artist. I know that of the 25000 plus views on social media I could have gotten the 11000 streams. I also found out that someone was listening to my music a lot and I asked them to stop as well as to delete their account thinking that would remove their streams and show that I was not trying to get fraudulent streams or not manually manipulating my streams myself. ( I truly can’t help what others do on their own accord) I lost money on my subscription to BandLab because I had just renewed it ($14.99) over 11000 streams that generated a measly $10.56 that I can’t even access because the ban not to mention the amount I paid for the instrumentals I had purchased and the fact that I started releasing music because I was out of work and have no transportation. I had put all I had into this just to be stripped of everything I worked for because of bogus accusations and I feel was an attempt to keep from paying me what was earned yet somehow Spotify is using fake artists and possibly even ai music (fake music) on their own curated playlists that are generating millions of streams and probably fake ones I now have reason to believe sense they are using fake artists and stacking their playlists with them. And then it’s all just too coincidental that they have been hush hush about this whole situation and right before it is brought to light all the top players in the company just happen to sell off massive amounts of shares in the company for a huge profit. This is just my story and I have heard the same story from many other artists. The ceo and other executives drove up the numbers to boost stock and then sell it for a profit. Just last month I saw where they claimed that they had lost a large amount of subscribers to their platform but today I saw an article saying that the streaming numbers were up almost a million. How do you lose that amount in subscribers yet still grow streams from then to now?

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