Sponsored
upper waypoint

SF Band Ditches Spotify Over CEO’s $700M Military AI Investment

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

A Japanese American woman plays the bass guitar and sings into a microphone
Satomi Matsuzaki of Deerhoof performs at the WOMAD Festival on July 27, 2024, in Malmesbury, England. (C Brandon/Redferns)

Indie band Deerhoof has severed ties with Spotify, the group announced Monday, citing CEO Daniel Ek’s substantial investments in military AI technology.

The angular indie band, which formed in San Francisco in 1994, said in a post on social media that it will remove its entire catalog from the streaming platform upon learning that Ek had led a $700 million round of funding for the European defense company Helsing. The startup develops AI defense software for use in air, land and sea warfare, and manufactures military drones used in air strikes.

Helsing announced the round of funding via Ek’s venture capital firm Prima Materia in a June 17 press release, which also named Ek as the new chairman of Helsing.

“We don’t want our music killing people,” the band’s statement reads. It goes on to call out the billionaire class for using the military as its security detail, the AI military tech sector for testing its products on people in Gaza, and Spotify for being an “already widely hated data-mining scam masquerading as a ‘music company.’”

Deerhoof’s current record label, Joyful Noise Recordings, issued a statement in support of the band’s decision, adding that “we too are sickened by the fact that our releases have inadvertently contributed to the global war machine.”

Sponsored

Since its inception, Deerhoof has released over 20 albums. No longer formally based in San Francisco, its members now live in various parts of the country. Last month, the band performed a homecoming show at the Rickshaw Stop in San Francisco.

Read the band’s full statement below.

We’re taking Deerhoof off Spotify.

“Daniel Ek uses $700 million of his Spotify fortune to become chairman of AI battle tech company” was not a headline we enjoyed reading this week. We don’t want our music killing people. We don’t want our success being tied to AI battle tech.

We are privileged that it was a pretty easy decision for us. Spotify only pays a pittance anyway, and we earn a lot more from touring. But we also understand that other artists and labels do rely on Spotify for a bigger chunk of their income, and don’t judge those who can’t make the same move in the short term.

AI battle tech is clearly emerging as the hot new big ticket item for the super-rich. It’s increasingly clear that the military and police exist primarily as the security detail for the billionaire class. The more of the killing you can get computers to do, the better your bottom line.

Computerized targeting, computerized extermination, computerized destabilization for profit, successfully tested on the people of Gaza, also finally solves the perennial inconvenience to war-makers — it takes human compassion and morality out of the equation.

Spotify is flushing itself down the toilet. Eventually artists will want to leave this already widely hated data-mining scam masquerading as a “music company.” It’s creepy for users and crappy for artists. Music-making lasts forever but this or that digital get-rich-quick scheme is sure to become obsolete.

One of the claims often made about Spotify is that it theoretically makes one’s music discoverable by anyone who signs up, no matter how remote they may be from the self-proclaimed centers of hipness. But just because someone is far from Western gatekeepers does not mean they lack culture, or need to hear our band. Deerhoof is a small mom and pop operation, and know when enough is enough. We aren’t capitalists, and don’t wish to take over the world. Especially if the price of “discoverability” is letting oligarchs fill the globe with computerized weaponry, we’re going to pass on the supposed benefits.

The big picture is this: Our politico-economic system increasingly presents humanity with a hideous fait accompli: Buy from me, vote for me, consume my media, use my service. Yes, it means mass deportation, mass detainment, and mass extermination of those deemed unprofitable by a handful of rich white people living in enclaves protected by AI weaponry. But if you don’t, you cannot have a job. We think this dilemma is coming to a head soon, and we predict that most people aren’t going to take the billionaires’ side.

We aren’t sure exactly how soon the takedowns can happen, but it will be as soon as possible. We want to thank our various labels for their support on this tricky decision. The grunt work of pulling content off of Spotify is something they’re now tasked with, and they are sharing the financial hit. We know we are asking them to make a sacrifice, and it means a lot to us.

lower waypoint
next waypoint