"This marks the end of a chapter that’s been filled with unforgettable experiences and immense personal growth," Eve Konstan wrote on LinkedIn.
Sure, a decent chunk of that did go to the artists—the release states that “well over 10,000 artists generate over $100,000 per year from Spotify alone”—but it seems to suck for most of those beneath the Bad Bunnys and Taylor Swifts of the world.
Universal Music Group and Spotify join forces to seal a massive deal that could forever change the future of the music business.
The streaming service set yet another record for the highest annual payment to the music industry from any single retailer
Spotify and Universal Music Group (UMG) just slid into a major multi-year collab, and it’s about to shake up the music streaming game.
Spotify and Universal announced a new deal that sources say improves the payment structure for the streamer's controversial music-audiobooks 'bundle.'
Spotify said today that it paid out a record $10 billion to the music industry last year, bringing its total payments to over $60 billion.
In a new open letter, Spotify have revealed they paid out $10 billion to the music industry in 2024 which is a billion more than their previous record fee
In a nondescript conference room, a senior data architect at a Fortune 500 retailer pulls up a dashboard that would have been impossible to imagine just five years ago. She toggles between traditional business intelligence metrics and sophisticated artificial intelligence models,
“7 New Songs You Should Hear Now” track list Track 1: Perfume Genius, “It’s a Mirror” Track 2: Lucy Dacus, “Ankles” Track 3: Central Cee & Young Miko, “Gata” Track 4: Japanese Breakfast, “Orlando in Love” Track 5: Daneshevskaya, “Kermit & Gyro” Track 6: Hamilton Leithauser, “Knockin’ Heart” Track 7: Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts, “Big Change”
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.