How to check who liked your Spotify playlist in 2023

How to check who liked your Spotify playlist in 2023

“You don’t need the world to have your back when you’re still an amateur in the game”
Your first few supporters as a musician would most likely come from your family members, loved ones, colleagues, and friends. While you shouldn’t feel entitled to anyone’s support, you should at least know who is interacting positively with your Spotify playlist. In this guide, I will discuss how to know who is down for you and who is not.

The Good old days

Unveiling those who liked a Spotify playlist used to be a straightforward path, but it all changed in 2013 when Spotify decided to stop its users from socializing on its platform. When the verdict was appealed on the Swedish DSP’s community forum, Spotify labeled the feature request with a ‘Not Right Now’ status. It’s been over nine years since the feature request was submitted and It has garnered over 24,000 upvotes, but Spotify is yet to publicly act on it.

The last vestige of interactivity left on the platform is the playlist ‘follow’ feature, but the music streaming giant has made it clear it has no interest in evolving into social media music streaming app.

Threading the grey areas: The new method of unveiling the identity of those who liked your Spotify playlist

You don’t need the world to have your back when you’re still an amateur in the game. Building a great relationship with your first 100 Spotify listeners can help you grow as an artist. The people who like your song on Spotify and follow you there are your real music fans not the ones on social media. Later, in an upcoming guide, we will confabulate about how to boost your presence online. But for now, let’s focus on how to recognize your first few supporters.

To view the total number of likes

  1. Go to your library and tap/click on your profile icon.
  2. Pick ‘view profile’ and navigate to ‘playlists’.
  3. Tap playlist.
  4. Check the total likes count under each playlist.

When people like your playlist, it means they are interested in your sound. More often than not, your most active followers on social media would not mind following your playlist.

After introducing your playlist to them via your DM or comment section, you should follow up by checking if they actually like your playlist or followed you on Spotify. To eliminate the guesswork, you can search for their profile on Spotify and check if your playlist is part of the ones they like. One more fastidious approach to getting them to like your playlist is by creating a birthday playlist, especially for them, or a zodiac sign playlist. You can always update their birthday playlist every year.

We do not recommend jam-packing your playlist rapaciously with only your own songs. It is best to feature artists whose music styles are similar to yours, meaning that you are trading a position on your playlist for a feature on another artist’s playlist. That way, you are introducing cross-playlisting, well-thought tactics that can help your listeners stay and listen longer to your playlist. It’s a win-win for you and the artists involved.

To know the people who liked your playlist

1.  Go to their public playlist.
2. There, you will see their liked playlists in their list of public playlists.
3.  Go to their profile and enlarge their playlist. You will be shown their favorite playlists, but if they are fans of lots of playlists, yours might not be part of the displayed playlists as Spotify only displays a handful of playlists per user (not all).

It is important to note that not all the playlists they have liked in the past are displayed on users’ profiles, hence this method is not foolproof. Also, this technique is nite easy to

implement if your likes count exceeds 500. It’s best suited for people who have less than 100 likes.

Beware of apps and people that promise to reveal your Spotify playlist followers’ identities for a token. Spotify offers no such feature.

Final Thoughts

When starting out as a new artist on Spotify, you have to thread a lot of grey areas and nurture great relationships to get yourself out there. It gets better as you grow bigger. However, do not be tempted to buy followers. Only active organic followers can make you the money you’ve always wanted to earn from your craft. Artificial followers aka deadweight aren’t good for business. You cannot deceive the fans or labels with bots.

Everything you should know about TikTok’s SoundOn

Everything you should know about TikTok’s SoundOn

Every upcoming indie artist has been debited for distribution services that do not translate into royalties in the past. Whether you used DistroKid or Tunecore, these two distributors care less if you make any profit from your music. These birds of the same feather do not help artists promote their music to make matters worse.

In our article titled, How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant, we promised to update you when any new developments arise regarding TikTok’s revolutionary distribution services, SoundOn. So, we are here with great news regarding the distribution platform.

If you are tired of paying annual fees for your music to be placed on digital streaming platforms like Deezer, Spotify, Apple, and TikTok, amongst many others, SoundOn is a better alternative. SoundOn is a new-age distribution company created by TikTok to help artists profit from their music at no cost.
You won’t be charged any transaction fees to get your music on DSPs, and you will receive 100% of the revenue generated through your music in the first year of release. Then, after the first year, SoundOn will retain only 10% of your profits. To put this into perspective, CDBaby charges a one-time fee of $9.95 per single and $29 for an album release. Then, they will take a 9% commission on digital sales. Tunecore charges the same transaction fees as CDBaby, but this time, you will keep paying them the same amount annually to keep your music on DSPs. To put out unlimited songs via DistroKid, you will pay $19.99 annually. SoundOn is way better than its antecedents.Unlike Labels, SoundOn does not own your masters, as artists keep all their music rights. You fully control where your song appears and how advertisers use it. 

Perks of distributing your music via SoundOn

TikTok hasn’t always been a level playing field for independent artists. However, the video-focused social networking giant aims to shift power dynamics using SoundOn. Below are how it intends to do so.

Free promotion on TikTok and professional guidance

In 2022, organic promotion is almost a myth, and artists have to pay to get seen on platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. TikTok is still a source of organic growth for many indies. SoundOn wishes to open up more windows of opportunities to artists by selectively promoting tracks released on SoundOn for free. 

The songs that qualify will be promoted by influencers affiliated with SoundOn promotional specialists.

Editorial Playlisting on Resso

Like Spotify, TikTok and Resso have editorial playlists for new music. Your song will be considered for editorial playlisting when you distribute your song via SoundOn. Resso is a social music streaming platform that allows users to enjoy music and create user-generated content (UGC) with other users.

Also, SoundOn intends to help artists boost their music careers to the “next level” with their selective A&R service.

Instant Verification of TikTok artist profile.

Are you unable to verify your TikTok artist profile via your current distributor? You can claim your profile by distributing using via SoundOn. This feature has been hidden from independent artists for months. The good news is that it is now accessible to all. You can also claim your Spotify and Apple Music profile on the Bytedance-supported distribution platform.

Easy Monetization on TikTok

When users use your music on TikTok, you ought to get paid. Unfortunately, many artists have been unable to get theirs because of improper distribution and lack of knowledge. With SoundOn, you can monetize your music on TikTok. You will get paid when users make content with your sound.

Final Thoughts

SoundOn has launched several self-serve and in-site marketing tools in the Beta mode. While these tools are not yet available to the general public, you can always count on us to give you a timely update when SoundOn launches them.

How to boost your Spotify stream share for singles and albums

How to boost your Spotify stream share for singles and albums

Spotify’s royalty rate is at an all-time low. The revenue earned per stream has reduced from $0.007 to $0.0028 since 2013. Currently, to make $8.7 on Spotify, you have to garner at least 3,114 streams. You should also note that the royalty payout can differ depending on the region.

In 2013, Spotify bragged about paying $0.007 per stream and doling out nothing less than $1 billion in five years, according to a BBC report. However, the current reality is a sad one, especially for indie artists that can no longer depend on their Spotify streams or album sales to earn a decent living. They have to depend on tours and merch sales to survive in the 21st century.

There are a few ways in which artists can maximize their Spotify royalty payout even though you should not neglect touring and merch sales. In this guide, we will teach you how to boost your Spotify stream share for singles and albums.

Spotify vs Artists: The Tussle for Better Pay

The luxurious lifestyle displayed by artists is a contributing factor to the increasing number of musicians in every genre, particularly Hip Hop. How can anyone not love the sparkling diamond grillz and chains, the hippity hoppity lowriders, and the abundance of well-rounded blondes? 

People see music as an escape from poverty aka the hood, trenches, or gutter; until reality hits them unannounced. Then, they realise that their idols balled on advances (loans) from labels and most of them couldn’t pay back the loans to date. 

Artists like Meek Mill, NBA Youngboy and Kanye West have opened up about their unfair 360 contracts and reasons upcoming artists should stay independent. NBA YoungBoy issued a clear warning to upcoming artists in an Instagram post. In the post, he said, “don’t sign to Atlantic unless you want to be a slave”. Even though the slave part is exaggerated, I trust that you get the message.

Spotify is no stranger to public criticisms from artists who feel they deserve more than the miserly Spotify payout pinched out to artists every 3 months. Artists like Taylor Swift, Amanda Palmer, Thom York, Kanye West, and Pocket gods.

Recently, Pocket gods, a British Lo-fi indie band from St Albans,  released a 1,000-track diss album (1000×30  – Nobody Makes Money Anymore) targeted at Spotify. The leader of the band, Mark Christopher Lee revealed that the album was inspired by a 2015 article (titled How streaming is changing everything we know about making music) by a music professor known as Mike Erico.

The protest album caught the attention of Spotify’s head of artist relations, Daniel Ek, and he fostered peace talks with the band. According to an iNews interview with Christopher Lee, Daniel lauded the idea of recording 30s tracks and in his words, the pocket gods were “ahead of the curve of shorter songs in the future”. While the protest could not force Spotify to increase its payout, it opened the doors of editorial playlists to 30 seconds tracks. As claimed by Christopher, “They said that I can pitch 30-second tracks to their playlists [drivers of chart hits] for consideration – I wasn’t able to do this previously as the songs were considered too short.”

How to boost your Spotify stream share for singles and albums

The current streaming era favours artists who adapt and might force those who do not conform into extinction. In this section, we will discuss how the global music sphere has changed and how artists can increase their payouts.

Write shorter songs

Like TikTok, Spotify wants people to spend quality time on their platform. And they have figured out that the current generation barely consumes lengthy music. Hence, the shorter, the better.  

While you don’t have to take it to the extreme by releasing a 1,000-track album like pocket gods, you want to keep your music between 1:30 – 2:30 minutes. The trick is to make addictive short songs that would make the listeners put your song on repeat. Remember, the more they repeat your songs, the higher your royalty check. 

Also, you have to study your genre to know what duration is acceptable. Genres like classical, Fuji, and Akpala require longer song durations unlike Lo-fi pop, RnB, rap, and afrobeat.

Singles not albums

Armed with the ability to submit short songs for playlist consideration, artists have a higher chance of making more money from streaming than before. However, Spotify does not accept album playlisting; it only allows musicians to send one song for playlist consideration. 

The Spotify streaming system “hates” album release. It rewards consistency over bulk release, hence it is better to put out a single for

the next 5 fortnights than to drop a 10 track album. In a case where an artist intends to feed and grow their fanbase, releasing a mixtape can save the day. But make no mistake, Spotify barely appreciates such gestures.

Make music for specific purposes and cultures

To successfully map out a promotion campaign for your next single, you ought to know its unique selling point. Is it a potential hood classic, a club banger, a certified library classic, or a song for the beach? 

Unless you have a clear idea of how your music can be beneficial to the song’s listener, you cannot promote it the right way. 

In case you are not sure, there is no need to pressure yourself. You can ask your loved ones, mentors or team members for their honest opinions on your music and how it can be best consumed. Trust me; you will be amazed by the responses you’d get.

Final Thoughts

Different times call for different approaches. While making money solely from one’s music has become more difficult, it is not impossible. You just have to be tactical and diligent.

Is Kanye West’s Stem Player a Failure or Success?

Is Kanye West’s Stem Player a Failure or Success?

I stumbled on a 2017 article by Kaitlyn Tiffany of the Verge which discussed the old brawl between Taylor Swift and Spotify in a critical manner. While I do not share her stance on the issue, one paragraph stood out as a bitter truth. The paragraph reads, “there is no such thing as “rare” when you’re talking about content that’s distributed primarily via the internet.”

The common rule of thumb when it comes to upping the price of a product is to make it rare.  That, of course, is the oldest trick in the book but it works like a charm even to this day. As Mark Twain puts it in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, “…in order to make a person covet a thing, it is only necessary to make the thing difficult to attain.” 

We see this rule play out when Nike releases a limited edition of a sneaker or when gas becomes scarce and we have to pay more to acquire less fuel. It can also be applied to music. In 2015, a single two-copy CD of Once Upon a Time in Shaolin created by the legendary hip-hop group, Wu-tang Clan, was sold for millions of dollars to Martin Shkreli in an open auction.

In today’s musical world, rarity is extinct. Gone are the days when people were “dying” to meet their icons, nowadays, it is very normal to sight a public figure across the street. These artists have no god-like aura around them, let alone their music. Apart from artists like Kendrick Lamar, Damian Marley, SZA, and Frank Ocean who are keen on self-preservation and making industry-defining albums, others are just 

following popular trends and hopping on TikTok hashtags. To make up for the low payout from DSPs, artists are becoming internet freaks and clowns so they can attract the most attention and make money from merchandise and brand deals. This new culture is degrading the quality of the music consumed.  For many boomers and Millenials who grew up in a completely different era, it’s a sad thing to behold. One artist who seems to care about making music creation a self-sustaining business is Ye (formerly known as Kanye Omari West). In his own way, he intends to defeat gigantic music distribution platforms and labels with a stem player – a device that looks more like an alien grenade than a music gadget. He recently released his Donda sequel album on the stem player and boldly rejected a 100 million Apple deal. In this guide, we will decide if the move was worth it.

More than a beef

Many hip-hop fans went from being skeptical to being angry when Kanye West announced that his 11th studio album, Donda 2, will not be accessible on DSPs like Spotify, Apple, Deezer, and Tidal.

In a now-deleted Instagram post, Ye ranted about how he passed on a 100 million dollars Apple deal in a bid to “set his own price for his art”. Hate him or love him, Mr. West has been one of the few forward-thinking artists to push the boundaries of what is accepted in the hip-hop community. This is greatly depicted in the recent Netflix documentary: jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy.  In John Caramanica’s words, Ye has “widened the genre’s gates”. This time, he’s venturing into tech with a seemingly selfless goal – to revolutionize music and free musicians from the grip of music DSPs. Not many artists can pass on a 100 million dollars Apple deal let alone boycott the music streaming giants. For most artists, that’s basically career suicide. In one of his Instagram rants, he called out music tech companies for making music “practically free” and “not caring about the music”. I hate to admit it, but Ye is right.

Times without number, Spotify has shown the world that they would choose to dole out 100 million dollars to a single podcaster overpaying musicians their actual worth. According to multiple reports from established sources, they offered a football team, Barcelona, half a billion dollars in return for their title rights yet they claim they cannot increase their yearly payouts to musicians. The phrase – put your money where your mouth is – does not apply to Spotify. It is safe to assume that they no longer care about the primary purpose of their existence – music.

Kanye west’s feuds are as popular as his music. He has beefed with Drake, Taylor Swift, his label, Joe Biden, and now, every music streaming platform. Unlike his previous beefs, this recent one has a philanthropic tone.

The Stem Player Release: a failure or success

The stem player is a modern, disc-shaped mp3 player and handheld remixer that allows fans to load tracks and isolate various elements of the music like beats, vocals, and other audio components. It gives the end-user more control over the way they consume music. For a price of $200, you can get the Stem Player via its website. To promote the stem player, Kanye West offered his sequel album, Donda 2 exclusively on the device.

According to Ye, he sold 6,217 units in 25 hours and made $1,358,597.69 dollars. Although no proof was provided, there is no doubt that the number would have doubled since the post was made. Let’s assume Ye grossed roughly 5 million dollars from the sale of his stem players, would the move be considered a win? In my opinion, no. The profit from the sale can’t be up to 2% of the money Apple offered him. Plus, he would have made way more than that if Donda 2 was made available on all digital streaming platforms. He may have lost the battle against the money-hungry DSPs, but some Ls are worth taking. Ye took one for the hood and every voiceless artist out there.

Final Thoughts

Where Ye goes from here is only known to Ye. Will he release his next project on DSPs and let the stem player die a next aural death? Is he going to double down on his stance and keep releasing music on the stem player? In the words of the great philosopher formerly known as Kanye Omari West, we “ain’t got the answers”.

The music industry and its romance with the Metaverse

The music industry and its romance with the Metaverse

99 cents does not do justice to the hours of songwriting and vocal practice artists invest in their craft. While the streaming era has increased the availability of music to people around the globe, artists are getting paid a tiny fraction of the revenue generated from their music catalogues. Tech companies like Spotify and Apple have made music practically free so that artists have to rely on merchandise sales, features, and tours to make a decent living. Two factors responsible for the underpayment of artists are the centralised industrial system and capitalist interest. Many independent artists believe that the Metaverse can be the remedy to both problems by offering a decentralised system where artists have control over the price tag on their music and create more opportunities for artists to make digital sales of virtual goods that require little production costs. 

How the metaverse is influencing pop culture

The Metaverse or Web 3.0 is a meshwork of 3D virtual worlds. It further fulfils the promise of the internet – which is to connect the human race. It allows the “existence” of unlimited structures and experiences that are not possible in the actual world. Also, people can assume different body forms, even other animal structures, in the Metaverse. In summary, the Metaverse brings human freedom to another level. Recently, the music industry has been flaunting two main elements of the Metaverse, namely NFTs and cryptocurrencies.

The NFT niche has been growing in popularity over the past six months. Chances are you have come across social media accounts with dope 

Music Metav

apes as their profile picture on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram. While most of the copycat versions have no Blockchain value, the original bored ape non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are popular among celebrities. The Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFTs were bought by artists such as Snoop Dogg, Justin Bieber, Post Malone, Paris Hilton. Eminem bought Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT for $450,000 on the 30th of December, 2021. The major selling point of the Bored Ape NFT is that the owners have full commercialisation rights to the ape art, meaning they can use it in any entertainment project, be it music, movies.  television, or novel. In addition, the users have access to Yacht Club and a digital graffiti board called “THE  BATHROOM”.

Apart from investing in virtual art projects, musicians can release their music as NFTs. One artist who has successfully put out an NFT project is Tory Lanez. On releasing the NFT album, When it’s dark, Lanez announced that he sold over 1 million copies, meaning he went platinum in 24 hours. The NFT was sold for a dollar per copy. One beautiful thing about releasing a project as an NFT is that core fans can get multiple copies of the project, making it easier for artists to reach certain milestones. Why would anyone buy a thousand copies of the same album? Well, the idea sounds ridiculous, but the logic behind such a move is pretty solid. People who buy multiple copies get it so they can resell it for a higher value. For instance, only one million copies of the album, “when it’s dark album”, was produced and sold on the day of release. To listen to the project, you need to buy it from a current NFT holder. These new owners can make profits off their virtual assets. It’s an opportunity for fans to make money while supporting their favourite artists (a feature that the current DSPs like Deezer, Spotify and Apple do not offer). For every NFT resold, the artist gets a share, making a very lucrative idea.

While other artists have been supportive of the metaverse idea, one artist who does not seem impressed by the idea of virtual assets is none other than Kanye West. According to an Instagram post on the official Kanye West page, the Donda crooner said, “Stop asking me to do NFT’s. I’m not finna co-sign. For now, I’m not on that wave. I make music and products in the real world.”

The Early Adopters

Given the negative attitude of established companies to cryptocurrency, one would expect traditional labels to toss away the idea of the Metaverse. Well, to our surprise, they are the early adopters rather than the laggards. Like two sides of the same coin, what seems to the indie artists as a route to freedom is viewed by the big labels as a means of expanding their influence and of course, making more dough. It must be noted that the metaverse can be a centralised tyranny or a decentralised haven of freedom. However, Blockchain Metaverse is decentralised. 

Warner Music Group, the parent label of Atlantic records, Warner records, Elektra Music Group, and Parlophone, has partnered with Sandbox to create the first music-themed in the Sandbox decentralised Metaverse.

The giant label aims to create virtual musical experiences and concerts in the Metaverse. Also, the label announced that they will be selling virtual LANDS close to their WMG property.

Snoop Dogg recently purchased his former label, Death Row Records, making him a certified label owner. Like WMG, Snoop Dogg announced his intention to convert Death Row into an NFT record label. According to Snoop, “We (Death Row Records) will be putting out artists through the metaverse. Just like we broke the industry when we was (sic) the first independent  (label) to be major. I want to be the first major (label) in the metaverse.” 

The race to be the first label to “break into” the Metaverse is on. And we hope the move benefits the artists as much as it enriches the labels.

Since Mark Zuckerberg dropped a bombshell by announcing his venture into the metaverse and his company’s name change from Facebook to Meta, the metaverse has stirred a debate online. People who antagonised the Metaverse are worried about safety and the rifting effect of a 3D immersive technology, especially when pioneered by Facebook, a company that has a bad history with data security on its platform. On the other hand, the early adopters (in this case, labels and artists) are concerned about the financial opportunities and endless possibilities the Metaverse presents. Although the concept is not new, Zuckerberg has helped bring it to the limelight.

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