Spotify CEO Condemns Kanye West’s ‘Awful’ Rants, But Won’t Remove His Music

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He said he would “obviously respect” the label’s wishes, but won’t remove West’s music without a request.Def Jam, a Universal Music label that owns the copyright to West’s songs from 2002 to 2016, hasn’t asked for streaming services to remove his work. The talent agency giant CAA dropped West, and so many corporate partners have dumped him that he’s fallen from the Forbes billionaires list.Spotify did remove music by R. Kelly and XXXTentacion in 2018 after scandals involving sexual assault and violence, according to Pitchfork. The rapper’s Grammy-winning recordings also remain available on other services, including Apple Music and YouTube.Endeavor talent agency CEO Ari Emmanuel and other entertainment industry figures have urged Spotify to end its relationship with West. The streamer later reversed itself on XXXTentacion’s recordings, concluding he didn’t violate Spotify policies.“We rolled this out wrong and could have done a much better job,” Ek told Variety at the time of his company’s guidelines. “The whole goal with this was to make sure that we didn’t have hate speech. Kanye West’s music can stay on streaming giant Spotify despite the rap star’s  “just awful” antisemitic statements, CEO Daniel Ek said.West, ditched by Adidas and other corporate partners after recent hate-filled rants on social media and in interviews, didn’t violate Spotify policies against hate speech because his vitriol doesn’t involve music or podcasts on the platform, Ek, who started the streaming service in 2006, told Reuters. “It’s really just his music, and his music doesn’t violate our policy,” said Ek, who condemned West’s antisemitic remarks as “just awful comments.”“It’s up to his label, if they want to take action or not,” Ek added.

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Kanye West’s music can stay on streaming giant Spotify despite the rap star’s  “just awful” antisemitic statements, CEO Daniel Ek said.

West, ditched by Adidas and other corporate partners after recent hate-filled rants on social media and in interviews, didn’t violate Spotify policies against hate speech because his vitriol doesn’t involve music or podcasts on the platform, Ek, who started the streaming service in 2006, told Reuters

“It’s really just...

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