advertisement
Rock

Godspeed You! Black Emperor Pull Music From Spotify, Tidal and Amazon Music

The veteran Canadian post-rock band have pulled their entire discography from the major streamers, with Apple Music soon to follow. The band's music is still available to buy and stream on Bandcamp.

Godspeed You! Black Emperor

Godspeed You! Black Emperor

Yannick Grandmont

Godspeed You! Black Emperor is the latest act to remove their music from Spotify.

Over the past few months, many artists including Chad VanGaalen, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Deerhoof and Xiu Xiu have removed their music from Spotify. In addition to qualms around royalty payments, many artists have cited military investments made by Spotify CEO Daniel Ek through his investment fund Prima Materia. Since 2021, Prima Materia has been investing in Helsing, a defense company that sells AI software to inform military decisions.


Godspeed! has gone one step further, removing nearly its entire discography from all major streaming services, including Tidal and Amazon Music.

advertisement

Two of the long-running Canadian post-rock band’s albums on American independent record label Kranky — 1998’s F# A# ∞ and 2000’s Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven — are still up on Apple Music — but that’s also set to change soon.

“Kranky has always granted artists control over how their music is presented and disseminated,” a representative shared with Pitchfork, confirming that Godspeed You! Black Emperor's remaining albums are in the process of being removed from the platform.

The band’s catalogue is still available to buy and stream via Bandcamp.

Godspeed You! Black Emperor has had two albums on the Billboard 200, but they've had even more impact on sales charts. The group has earned five albums on Billboard’s Top Album Sales, including 2021’s G_d’s Pee At State's End, which peaked at No. 8. Five albums have charted on the Vinyl Albums chart, with 2012’s Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend! hitting No. 1.

That album won Canada's Polaris Music Prize in 2012, but the band didn't show up to receive the award, using the $30,000 prize to launch and fund a program to provide musical instruments to prisoners in Quebec.

The band's label, Constellation, confirms that Godspeed! requested their catalogue be removed from all digital platforms except Bandcamp, and says the band and label have no further comment.

advertisement

Though the band hasn't shared their exact reason for removing their music or if it is related to Ek's military investments, they have often espoused anti-capitalist and anti-war perspectives. Their most recent album, 2024's No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead, was titled after the death toll of Palestinians, as reported by Gaza’s Health Ministry, at that time in Israel’s war in Gaza.

In a statement accompanying the album, the band wrote:

“THE PLAIN TRUTH==
we drifted through it, arguing.
every day a new war crime, every day a flower bloom.
we sat down together and wrote it in one room,
and then sat down in a different room, recording.”

advertisement
William Shatner at the 22nd Annual VES Awards hosted by the Visual Effects Society held at The Beverly Hilton on February 21, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California.
JC Olivera/Variety

William Shatner at the 22nd Annual VES Awards hosted by the Visual Effects Society held at The Beverly Hilton on February 21, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California.

Rock

William Shatner To Go Where He’s Never Gone Before on Heavy Metal Album Featuring Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden Covers

The 94-year-old TV icon teased that the untitled LP will feature 35 "metal virtuosos."

Forget about second acts in American life, TV legend William Shatner is up to his fourth, maybe 10th act at this point. The 94-year-old actor best known for playing the irascible James T. Kirk on the original Star Trek series and movies, as well as police sergeant T.J. Hooker in the 1980s is boldly going where even he hasn’t gone before.

In an Instagram post on Thursday (Feb. 19), the mutli-hyphenate performer who made his musical debut in 1968 with the beyond bizarre The Transformed Man LP featuring his florid readings of The Beatles’ “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” and Elton John’s “Rocket Man,” announced that he’s prepping his first heavy metal album at an age where metal typically goes into your body rather than comes out.

keep readingShow less
advertisement