Rapper’s song catalogue remains accessible despite business pushback against antisemitic remarks
Several weeks after a raft of antisemitic comments which finally pushed companies from Balenciaga, to Vogue, to Gap and TJ Maxx to sever ties, one area of Ye’s empire still remains relatively untouched.
Formerly known as Kanye West, the rapper and producer Ye built his name as a cultural firebrand from a music career that spawned four multi-platinum albums and 11 Grammys before it began to be overshadowed by onstage rants, controversy, and eventually antisemitic and other offensive remarks.
But through it all, his music remained accessible on major streaming platforms, as brands and social media platforms were pressured to remove him.
While it might seem counterintuitive for him to remain unpunished on what is effectively his central business, it’s unlikely we’ll see the same kind of pushback and distancing on streaming sites as with other arenas.
“It doesn’t surprise me because they are fundamentally different kinds of businesses,” explained Serona Elton, a professor who studies the music industry at the University of Miami. “The nature of the business and contractual relationship with Ye is quite different in these different sectors.”
While platforms like Instagram, Facebook and — most notably — Twitter have been embroiled in a debate over how, and whether, to exclude certain voices, music streaming has remained largely exempt.
And the few times streaming services have taken steps toward removing an artist from their platform, such as Spotify did following R&B singer R. Kelly’s conviction for sex crimes against children, they were later walked back.
In regards to Ye, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek recently told Reuters they would take a similar stance. While calling his antisemitic messages “just awful comments,” Ek said they would not take the rapper’s songs off their platform, or wade into the field of content moderation beyond the lyrics of artists’ songs.
“It’s really just his music, and his music doesn’t violate our policy,” he said, adding that “it’s up to his label if they want to take action or not.”
That sentiment is why Ye is more likely to be forced out of public brand deals and social media platforms than spaces designed to share his productions, Elton said.
“There are other examples of musical artists having done things that are considered morally reprehensible, and in at least a couple of cases, criminal,” she said, emphasizing the damaging gravity of Ye’s recent statements. “And the art still exists, and people can choose to consume it or not — depending on how much they feel the association between the artist and the art should influence them.”