this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2025
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Chapotraphouse

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I get that there are three things this site will think I should be ashamed of:

  1. Using Alexa
  2. Using Spotify
  3. Being a Collective Soul fan

I will accept criticism of the first two, but not the third. I’m a loud and proud Collective Soul fan, I’ve been to at least 10-12 of their concerts, they rock

We have an Amazon Echo. My wife got one and loves it as do my kids so I’m stuck with it. I hate Spotify as the CEO is a huge Zionist. I plan on migrating to Deezer or something once I get around to copying my playlists.

Anyway, since I was cooking I grudgingly decided to use Alexa to play some Collective Soul. Shouldn’t be a problem, they just had the most #1 Alterative Rock hits on Billboard during the 90s (not a typo) and over 3.8 million monthly users.

I said the precise statement into the Echo speaker:

“Alexa, plays songs by Collective Soul on Spotify”

The response was “playing songs by Machine Soul Collective”

I tried a few different variations of the same statement, and each time Alexa directed me to this Machine Soul Collective “band”.

Turns out it’s just AI generated slop “music” with only a few thousand monthly listeners.

So what gives here? Why is Alexa not playing music from a major band and instead directing me to AI slop? Is this intentional? Do they make more money by not paying royalties to an actual band? I don’t know but this is really bugging me.

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[–] LanyrdSkynrd@hexbear.net 11 points 3 weeks ago

Spotify tries to get it's users to listen to songs that aren't part of their normal revenue split with the major record labels.

There was an article a while back about how their auto-playlists were dominated by a handful of tiny labels. These record labels make deals with a smaller revenue split, but with the promise of being forced on to users. For the label it makes sense since nobody was listening to these songs anyway, so some money is better than no money. And it makes sense for Spotify since they make more money as well.