Spotify & Sony Make Global Deal – Massive Attack Protests

Spotify & Sony Make Global Deal

Spotify & Sony Make Global Deal

This week in the music industry is dominated by two major developments: Spotify has reached a sweeping global licensing deal with Sony Music and Sony Music Publishing to improve how songwriters are paid, while Massive Attack have pulled their music from Spotify in protest over its CEO’s investments in military AI tech.

1. Spotify & Sony Sign Global Deal

  • Spotify and Sony have agreed to a multi‑year global licensing partnership that covers both recorded music and publishing rights.

  • Crucially, Sony Music Publishing now has a direct licensing deal in the US under this agreement, meaning songwriters will be able to receive more direct compensation.

  • The deal signals a shift away from traditional blanket licensing models toward more customized arrangements, with the potential for better payouts for creators.


2. Massive Attack & Ethical Protest

  • Massive Attack have removed their music from Spotify—not only participating in the “No Music For Genocide” campaign but also in protest of CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in Helsing, a firm developing military AI and drone technologies.

  • Over 400 artists and labels are now part of the No Music For Genocide initiative, calling for music platforms to block content in Israel via geo‑blocking, as a statement against alleged human rights abuses.

  • Massive Attack argue that even if unintended, fan purchases and streaming dollars may indirectly support problematic technologies, raising moral questions about responsibility in the music business.


3. Implications & Significance

  • For Artists: The Sony‑Spotify agreement may serve as a model for better deals: more transparency, greater share in publishing, stronger recognition of songwriter rights.

  • For Streaming Platforms: With public scrutiny intensifying, platforms will need to consider not only their business models but their ethical footprints—investments, partnerships, leadership decisions will increasingly matter.

  • For Fans & Consumers: Audiences are increasingly aware of ethical considerations. Where music comes from, how it’s licensed, what causes it may indirectly support—these are becoming part of the listening experience.


Conclusion

We’re seeing a turning point: deals like Spotify/Sony show potential pathways for fairness in royalties and rights; actions by artists like Massive Attack spotlight that moral accountability isn’t optional anymore. For all players in the industry: it’s no longer enough to just do business—how you do it is also under the microscope.

If you want your releases to reflect not just great sound but also fair value—for you as creator—with clear publishing deals, ethical positioning & strong streaming strategy, I’d be glad to help bring that to life.