Skip to main content

Taylor Swift praises Apple Music, calls Spotify a ‘corporate machine’

Taylor Swift
Eva Rinaldi/Flickr

It’s been nine months since Taylor Swift made headlines for denouncing Spotify and exiting the service, but apparently she still holds a grudge. Swift, who has spoken out against both Spotify and Apple Music within the past year in defense of artist royalties, recently explained to Vanity Fair why she believes that Apple cares about artist’s concerns, while Spotify is behaving more like a “corporate machine.”

After hearing that Apple Music was planning on not paying music rights holders in the service’s first three months, Swift argued in a public letter on her blog that it was unfair for the massive corporation to slight artists. She told Vanity Fair that she wrote the letter “at around four A.M.” and that she only read it to her mom before publishing it. When Apple agreed to change policy about paying artists, Swift says she felt that the company “treated me like I was a voice of a creative community that they actually cared about.” Swift then agreed to put her new album, 1989, exclusively on Apple Music.

In November, Swift pulled all of her music from Spotify to protest the service’s meager royalty payments on its free, ad-supported tier, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek’s response — that his company is helping the music industry monetize business previously lost from piracy and has paid millions to artists and labels — just wasn’t good enough for the her. She explained to Vanity Fair that “the start-up with no cash flow reacted to criticism like a corporate machine.”

While Swift’s argument that music streamers don’t fairly pay artists has certainly been echoed by multiple parties, Apple Music and Spotify are an apples-to-oranges comparison. Swift thinks Spotify should phase out its free, ad-supported tier, which pays significantly lower royalties than its $10 per month subscription tier but is used by the bulk (73 percent) of the service’s 75 million users. However, It’s unrealistic to ask Spotify to discontinue its free tier on a whim, considering that it would alienate 55 million customers, would require a complete revamp of the entire service, and would be counterproductive to the service’s already unprofitable bottom line.

In comparison, Apple Music’s decision to pay artists during its three month free trial period was comparably easy as the service was starting from scratch and has, literally, hundreds of billions of dollars in cash at its disposal ($203 billion to be exact, according to CNN Money) with one of the world’s biggest and most influential corporations behind it. Taking the service’s differences into consideration, the fact that Apple Music and Spotify’s paid premium service pay roughly the same in royalties doesn’t help Swift’s case, either.

T-Swift may have won a small victory against Apple Music for musicians and rights holders, but she still has a long way to go if she wants to make the streaming music industry more fairly compensate struggling artists. And continually ripping Apple Music’s most viable competitor in the burgeoning on-demand market may not be the best way to go about it.

Editors' Recommendations

Chris Leo Palermino
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chris Leo Palermino is a music, tech, business, and culture journalist based between New York and Boston. He also contributes…
Spotify Wrapped 2022 is here: What’s your ‘listening personality’?
Spotify Wrapped 2022's new Music Personality feature.

The much-anticipated 2022 edition of Spotify Wrapped is here, with a detailed, data dive into all the most listened-to music, podcasts, artists, albums, and more for the year, as well as offering you a look at your own listening data from 2022. It's always a fun way to discover some of your own listening stats (like how many hours you logged, or the songs you played on repeat), all presented in a cool slideshow-style presentation on your phone or tablet. Apple Music has its own version of it, as does YouTube Music, but Spotify's is easily the standard. And this year, as usual, they've added a few new tricks.

Spotify Wrapped is a shareable social media goldmine for the company, and this year the music streamer has added a couple of new features, including "Your Listening Personality," which uses your listening habits throughout the year to slot you into one of 16 personality types, including The Specialist, The Adventurer, The Fanclubber, and The Replayer. The feature uses metrics to look at how you tend to listen to music -- do you listen to the same tracks or artists on repeat, are you the first to jump on new releases, or are you a wanderer of the Spotify catalog looking for something new?

Read more
A new Mercedes might be the best way to experience Apple Music’s spatial audio
Interior of a Mercedes-Benz with an Apple Music Spatial Audio sound system.

Mercedes has announced that it's the first car maker to give drivers a way to hear Apple Music's spatial audio content as it was meant to be experienced. Starting with the Mercedes-Maybach S-Class, the Mercedes-Benz S-Class, and the EQE, EQE SUV, EQS, and EQS SUV, spatial audio tracks in Dolby Atmos Music from Apple Music can be played without the use of an iPhone when buyers select the Burmester 4D or 3D sound system option for their vehicles.

Dolby Atmos support in cars isn't new. The Lucid Air became the first car to support the 3D audio format in 2021, and Mercedes itself added support for it on its Burmester systems that same year. But having a sound system that is Dolby Atmos capable, and being able to actually stream Dolby Atmos content to that system, are different things. Prior to Mercedes' announcement, getting a true Dolby Atmos Music experience from Apple Music meant using an iPhone with headphones or earbuds, or using an Apple TV connected to a Dolby Atmos-capable TV, soundbar, or home theater system.

Read more
What is Apple Music? music, pricing, and features explained
iPhone with Apple Music logo on the screen. A pair of Earpods lay next to it.

Much like TV and movies, streaming revolutionized music as well, with Spotify and Apple Music reigning supreme today. Although Apple Music is no longer the more popular of the two, it still boasts 78 million subscribers as of Q2 2021.

Home to more than 90 million songs (still besting Spotify's 82 million), curated playlists, social listening tools, Apple exclusives, and quality features such as Dolby Atmos Music and lossless audio, Apple Music shows no signs of giving up the fight. If you're thinking of grabbing yourself a membership, we've broken down the fundamentals of the service to let you know what you can expect.
The basics
Like Spotify, Apple Music offers millions of streaming songs on demand. It also blends your personal music catalog with on-demand streaming and live radio, all in one place. At the moment, Apple offers a one-month free trial (or more if you buy eligible audio devices), and after the trial period, the service will cost you $10 per month for the Individual plan or $15 per month for a Family plan that accommodates up to six members.

Read more