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What Happened To Genius On Spotify

Hundreds of K-pop songs disappear from Spotify

Past Mark Savage
BBC music reporter

IU performing in Wuhan, China Epitome source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Pop star IU is among the artists who are affected

Hundreds of popular Yard-pop songs have been removed from Spotify, amid a dispute with South Korean music distributor Kakao M.

Releases past popular acts including Sistar, IU, Monsta X and Epik High have vanished, leaving fans frustrated.

Spotify said its "existing licensing deal" with Kakao M had "come to an stop" merely it hoped the disruption would be temporary.

Simply the Korean company accused Spotify of refusing to extend its licence.

Kakao M is South korea's peak music distributor, responsible for 37.5% of the songs featured in the land'southward Top 400 Yearly Song Chart in 2020.

It also owns and operates the country's tiptop music streaming service, MelOn, with viii.81 million monthly active users.

'Fans suffer'

The dispute prompted acrimony from some of the artists whose work was affected.

"Why is it ever the artists and the fans that suffer when businesses place greed over fine art?" said Tablo, the leader and producer of hip-hop band Epik Loftier.

He said the sudden removal of their virtually recent album, January's Epik High Is Here (Function 1), was "confronting our will".

The music remains available on services like Deezer and Apple Music.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

The dispute illustrates the transient nature of subscribers' streaming libraries.

Although lx,000 songs are uploaded to Spotify every day, popular tracks can disappear overnight when the visitor'due south agreements with tape labels and rights-holders expire. Users will then see songs "greyed out" in their playlists.

And it's not merely Spotify - any streaming service tin remove or supersede music without notifying y'all as deals expire and are re-negotiated.

We're more used to it on video-streaming apps like Netflix and Amazon Prime number, where movies and TV shows shuffle on and off the bill of fare on a monthly ground; but music streamers tend to offer a more stable library.

Image source, Getty Images

Image explanation,

Epik High criticised the move

In a argument, Spotify confirmed Kakao M's music was no longer available worldwide.

"Despite our best efforts, the existing licensing deal nosotros had with Kakao M (which covered all countries other than South korea) has come to an end," it said.

"The fact that nosotros have not notwithstanding reached agreement on a new global bargain is unfortunate for their artists, as well every bit for fans and listeners worldwide. It is our hope that this disruption will be temporary and we can resolve the situation soon."

Still, later that same morn, Kakao M countered with its own argument, in which information technology claimed that Spotify had been the i who chose non to renew their agreement, even afterwards a asking on Kakao Yard's part.

'Billions of streams lost'

Information technology suggested the move was linked to ongoing conversations over the availability of their music on the South Korean version of Spotify, which launched 4 weeks ago.

"Unrelated to the domestic contract, which nosotros are still negotiating, nosotros separately received notice of the expiration of our license on February 28, and we requested a renewal of our existing global contract.

"Due to Spotify's policy that they must proceed with the domestic and global contracts at the aforementioned time, our global contract has currently expired," it continued.

"Nosotros are currently continuing our negotiations about the supply of music."

Amongst the artists whose discographies have at least partially disappeared are IU, Seventeen, Nu'est, Mamamoo, Epik High, Monsta X, Apink, Zico, Block B, Lovelyz, Brave Girls, CNBlue, Younha and many others.

Twitter user @Lemonphobic has compiled a running list of those who are affected.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Meanwhile, a fan business relationship defended to boyband Seventeen suggested their total number of streams had fallen past more than 1 billion since last week.

Follow us on Facebook, or on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts. If yous have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.

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Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-56237626

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