Mood Machine

The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist

Hardcover, 288 pages

english language

Published Jan. 7, 2025 by Atria/One Signal Publishers.

ISBN:
978-1-6680-8350-5
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(1 review)

An unsparing investigation into Spotify’s origins and influence on music, weaving unprecedented reporting with incisive cultural criticism, illuminating how streaming is reshaping music for listeners and artists alike.

Drawing on over one hundred interviews with industry insiders, former Spotify employees, and musicians, Mood Machine takes us to the inner workings of today’s highly consolidated record business, showing what has changed as music has become increasingly playlisted, personalized, and autoplayed.

Building on her years of wide-ranging reporting on streaming, music journalist Liz Pelly details the consequences of the Spotify model by examining both sides of what the company calls its two-sided marketplace: the listeners who pay with their dollars and data, and the musicians who provide the material powering it all. The music business is notoriously opaque, but here Pelly lifts the veil on major stories like streaming services filling popular playlists with low-cost stock music and the rise of new …

2 editions

Essential

It's easy to say that streaming is bad because artists can't make a living, but this book goes way beyond that. Spotify (and streaming in general) has influenced the work of being an artist in all sorts of ways described in the book. It's extremely well-researched and documented, full of quotes from artists, employees of Spotify, music industry professionals, etc. It's obviously focused on music, but it's impossible to read this book without thinking that basically any form of labor which can be commodified will be commodified and strip-mined for all of its value by the market.

The book is pretty bleak, but it's also full of hope for the future. There's a lot here about artist/labor movements, local organizing and things like that. It's good! You should read it.

Subjects

  • music
  • streaming
  • musicians
  • capitalism
  • wage slavery