Tag: artist compensation

Spotify To Continue Its Service in Uruguay

We’re pleased to share that Spotify will remain available in Uruguay and will continue to give artists the opportunity to live off their art. Meanwhile millions of fans will still have the chance to enjoy and be inspired by their favorite artists.

The Uruguayan government has demonstrated that it recognizes the value Spotify provides to local artists, songwriters, and fans. The clarification to the recent changes in music copyright law means that the rightsholders—to whom Spotify already pays roughly 70% of every dollar it generates for music—should be responsible for these costs. 

For our users and subscribers in Uruguay, this is what it means:

For Spotify Premium subscribers: Make sure your payment details are up-to-date here so that you continue getting the best audio experience and listening to music on demand, without interruptions and with offline listening. 

For Spotify Free users: Nothing will change. You’ll be able to continue to stream your favorite artists, podcasts, and playlists.

Spotify will continue its operations in Uruguay, connecting artists with fans and supporting local industry growth.

For more information on the global streaming economy, the players, and the process, visit our website Loud & Clear.

Spotify continuará su servicio en Uruguay

Nos complace compartir que Spotify seguirá disponible en Uruguay y podrá seguir brindando a los artistas la oportunidad de vivir de su arte y a miles de millones de fans la oportunidad de disfrutar e inspirarse con su música.

El gobierno uruguayo ha demostrado que reconoce el valor que Spotify brinda a los artistas locales, compositores y fans. La aclaración de los recientes cambios en la ley de derechos de autor de la música significa que los titulares de los derechos – a quienes Spotify ya paga aproximadamente el 70% de cada dólar que genera por la música – deben asumir la responsabilidad de estos costos.

Para nuestros usuarios y suscriptores en Uruguay, esto es lo que significa:

Para los suscriptores de Spotify Premium, asegúrate de que tus datos de pago estén actualizados aquí para continuar obteniendo la mejor experiencia de audio y escuchando música a demanda, sin interrupciones y sin conexión.

Para los usuarios gratuitos, no cambia nada y podrás continuar escuchando tus artistas, podcasts y playlists favoritos.

Spotify continuará sus operaciones en Uruguay, conectando artistas con fans y apoyando el crecimiento de la industria local.

Para obtener más información sobre la economía global del streaming, los participantes y el proceso, visita nuestro sitio web Loud & Clear.

Spotify Is Being Pushed Out of Uruguay

UPDATE 12/12/2023: Spotify will remain available in Uruguay and will continue to give artists the opportunity to live off their art. Meanwhile millions of fans still have the chance to enjoy and be inspired by their favorite artists. To learn more, click here for the most up-to-date information.

Unfortunately, Spotify will begin to phase out its service in Uruguay effective January 1, 2024, and fully cease service by February.

The government of Uruguay recently passed a budget bill that includes dramatic changes to the way music works in the country (the Rendición de Cuentas). Spotify already pays nearly 70% of every dollar it generates from music to the record labels and publishers that represent and pay artists and songwriters and has contributed more than $40B to date. The changes in this bill could force Spotify to pay twice for the same songs and unless the government makes it clear that record labels and publishers to whom we pay that ~70% should bear the responsibility for these costs, this will make our business of connecting artists and fans unsustainable. 

We want to continue giving artists the opportunity to live off their art and billions of fans the opportunity to enjoy and be inspired by it. However, at this stage, Spotify has no choice but to stop being available in Uruguay.

For our users and subscribers in Uruguay, this is what today’s news means for you:

We will stop billing Spotify Premium subscribers in December, and you will be able to enjoy your last full month of Premium. After this, you will be moved to a Free account until the service is suspended on February 1st. You can check your billing date here. After December 28, it won’t be possible to start a new subscription and after February 1st, Spotify will not be available in Uruguay. 

We are also contacting artists and creators directly about what this means for them. 

For more information on the global streaming economy, the players, and the process, visit our website Loud & Clear.

Spotify está siendo forzado a salir de Uruguay

ACTUALIZACIÓN 12/12/2023: Spotify seguirá disponible en Uruguay y continuará brindando a los artistas la oportunidad de vivir de su arte y a que millones de fans tengan la oportunidad de seguir disfrutarndo e inspirandose en sus artistas favoritos. Haz clic aquí para obtener la información más actualizada.

Desafortunadamente, Spotify comenzará a retirar gradualmente su servicio en Uruguay a partir del 1 de enero de 2024, y cesará completamente el servicio en febrero.

Recientemente, el gobierno de Uruguay aprobó la ley de Rendición de Cuentas que incluye cambios drásticos en la forma en que funciona la música en el país. Spotify ya paga cerca del 70% de cada dólar que genera de la música a las discográficas y editoras quienes representan y pagan a los artistas y compositores, y ha contribuido con más de $40 mil millones de dólares hasta la fecha. Los cambios con esta nueva ley podrían obligar a Spotify a pagar dos veces por las mismas canciones, y a menos que el gobierno aclare que las discográficas y editoras, a quienes pagamos ese ~70%, deben asumir la responsabilidad de estos costos, nuestro negocio de conectar artistas y fans será insostenible.

Queremos seguir brindando a los artistas la oportunidad de conectar con los oyentes, y a los fans la oportunidad de disfrutar e inspirarse con su música. Sin embargo, en este momento, Spotify no tiene más opción que dejar de estar disponible en Uruguay.

Esto es lo que significa la noticia de hoy para nuestros usuarios y suscriptores en Uruguay:

Dejaremos de facturarte por Spotify Premium en diciembre, y podrás disfrutar de tu último mes completo de Premium. Después de esto, pasarás a una cuenta gratuita hasta la suspensión del servicio el 1 de febrero. Puedes verificar tu fecha de facturación aquí. A partir del 28 de diciembre, no será posible crear una nueva suscripción a Spotify Premium, y después del 1 de febrero Spotify no estará disponible en Uruguay. 

También estamos contactando directamente a artistas y creadores para explicarles lo que esto significa para ellos.

Para obtener más información sobre la economía global del streaming, los participantes y el proceso, visita nuestro sitio web Loud & Clear.

Streaming Helped Eloise Land a Room of Her Own

U.K.-based indie artist Eloise doesn’t have a standard songwriting routine. Rather, she writes when inspiration strikes. “It’s annoyingly variable,” she admits. “I’ll be out with friends having the best time ever, and then I’ll be like, oh no, I’ve got to leave now. I have to go and flesh this idea out.” When ideas for her recent low-fi R&B-inspired singles “Therapist” and “Drunk On a Flight” came to her in the middle of the night, the 23-year-old songwriter had no choice but to oblige. 

Eloise began taking piano lessons at age four and started writing songs at age eight. As a child, she wanted to be in musical theater, telling For the Record that “music ended up being the very clear thing that came super naturally to me.” In 2019 she put out her first EP, This Thing Called Living, and began to see those times she left her friends early start to pay off.

Was there a moment you realized that your work was being heard?

I built up a lot of stuff before I put music out. And by touring, I built up a lot of listeners who were ready to listen to what I released, which is such a powerful thing to do. But I think the moment for me was probably just before COVID-19. Billie Eilish had mentioned my music in different interviews, and especially “Left Side.” I just saw my streams drastically go up. And that was just such an important moment in my career, basically, because not only was it validating, but that’s also a song that’s quite niche—it hasn’t got a chorus. It’s really nice for that one to have been found. And it was the beginning of, like, this ball rolling, basically, with everything I do translating into streaming land. The magic. 

I also remember getting on the Our Generation playlist for the first time. That was one that felt very cool because at the start, it was quite hard to be placed because I was very much going into a way more jazzy vibe, or a coffee shop vibe. When I first was on Our Generation, I thought, “Oh, I’m in the cool person playlist—young people listen to this. And not just in the background, but intentionally, on their car journeys and stuff.” So that was a really nice moment. But any time I’m on New Music Friday, that’s always brilliant—just a real thrill every single time. It’s quite nice to be supported. And it just spreads the word so well, better than you can, at the end of the day.

Image credit: Charlotte Patmore

And that moment continued to build. What happened next?

It’s funny because soon after that, we all went into lockdown. And to be honest, I felt like I lost the trajectory that I had before COVID-19. For all of us who were developing at that time, everyone’s success lost momentum, really, in that two-year period. So I spent that time just writing a mini-record.

And then I put it out in 2021 after not having put out music for a few years, and it was just incredible. The people were still there! That’s kind of a move you can’t do unless you’re famous and people will still be waiting for you. But people had been waiting that whole time. People clicked that little follow button and just kept it going. 

It’s funny because my streams are always growing—they’re almost linear, which is a really nice and rare thing, but they’ve never spiked and then dropped off. It’s a very slow climb, but it keeps climbing. So during that time, I definitely built a wider audience; there are more people who joined the fam. 

As your career has taken off, what’s changed in your life? 

Well, I mean, I moved out. I lived with my friends, which in itself, you know, I couldn’t have done before. I moved into a really lovely house with my friends in the part of London we’d always daydreamed about living in when we were kids. 

And then not only that, but then I eventually got to move into a flat by myself. 

And those two things happening have been monumental. I have so much freedom and space to make music and to find my sanity. What a journey you go through when you live by yourself. It’s been incredible. I’m in a building where I can make a racket the whole time. I can get up at four in the morning and have an idea and write it down. That’s why all of the songs on my upcoming album are literally “four AM songs”—songs that I was able to just, like, play in my space without waking anyone up.

Can you share some of the hurdles you’ve experienced in your career? 

When you’re someone like me, there’s a weird relationship you have with your job because in order for you to be successful and make enough money to live and live a lovely life, you have to be willing to give some things up. I’m such a homebody; I’m such a pub-with-my-friends person. But starting when I was 17, I was on the road for basically three years. So I definitely put this real value on my home life. And you know, this industry is not about your home life. 

It was also really hard to get people on board with the fact that I was independent. For me, it was the most exciting thing ever because the way my manager would answer my concerns of “I don’t want to give too much up” was brilliant. He was like, “This is what we do. We just do it on our own terms. If it does well, it does well, and then that’s great. And the word will spread.” 

All this was a massive risk, and I’m super lucky that it paid off. But the reason I can live the way I do, and by myself in London, is because I released that music independently and made that money for me from the songs I wrote from the streams that I got. It feels like the way it should be, like, super, organic, and lovely. 

Image credit: Charlotte Patmore

Any dream collaborations?

I kind of love to do stuff with people who are way cooler than me—like Anderson.Paak. I’d love to do a soul song with him. Probably stuff that is different from what I do. If I’m going to go and challenge myself by doing a collaborative project, I’d love for it to be challenging on all fronts.  

How have your fans reacted as you’ve put out more music? 

When I eventually went to record my EP, the thing that people said—which is how I feel with any of my favorite artists—was, “I’m so proud there’s more of you, that there’s more to know of your music.” And I think people feel like I’ve let them in on the secrets in my music. They also have this feeling that they know me and that they get to hold a piece of me. They know where I am musically in my life, and it’s such a lovely, shared experience. And the people who listen to my music are so gorgeous. They’re such lovely, lovely, lovely people, and they share my music all the time. That never slows down—it’s really nice.

Watch other rising artists and discover how they made it using Spotify tools on Spotify for Artists.