logo
Spotify CEO: AI to spur more music creativity, not a threat

Spotify CEO: AI to spur more music creativity, not a threat

The Star2 days ago

STOCKHOLM: Artificial intelligence will encourage more people to create music in the future and is not a threat to the industry, the founder and CEO of streaming giant Spotify said.
Artists using machine-learning tools to produce music have given rise to concerns about whether AI-generated music – even entirely fake artists – could one day replace human artists.
"I'm mostly optimistic and mostly very excited because we're just in the beginning of understanding this future of creativity that we're entering," Daniel Ek told reporters at an Open House at the company's Stockholm headquarters this week.
Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter and a recent book, Mood Machine, have accused Spotify of tasking a handful of producers to make thousands of songs under fake AI profiles, which the company allegedly pushed onto playlists – saving Spotify money by elbowing out real artists and their higher royalties.
Spotify has denied the claims.
"We want real humans to make it as artists and creators, but what is creativity in the future with AI? I don't know. What is music?" Ek said.
He recalled that electronic dance music and the DJ culture, and before that, hip hop where people sampled music, were initially not considered "real music".
Noting that Mozart had to compose entire symphonies in his head, Ek said that "now, any one of us can probably create a beat in five or 10 minutes".
"The tools that we now have in our availability are just staggering."
"Of course there are very scary potential applications for AI, but the more interesting thing for me is that the amount of creativity that creative people will have available at their fingertips is going to be insane," he said.
"The barriers for creation are becoming lower and lower. More and more people will create," he said.
Ek said he saw the development of AI in the music industry "much more as an evolution than a revolution".
Spotify had 678 million active users at the end of March, including 268 million paying subscribers.
Ek said the company, which turned its first annual profit in 2024, now had 100 million paying subscribers in Europe alone, and hoped to one day see a billion paying users worldwide.
"I don't think there's any doubt in my mind that the potential for Spotify at some point is to eventually get to over a billion paying subscribers." – AFP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man jumps into display of China's Terracotta Army: officials
Man jumps into display of China's Terracotta Army: officials

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Man jumps into display of China's Terracotta Army: officials

China's famous terracotta warriors pictured in the northern Chinese city of X'ian. Photo: AFP A domestic tourist climbed over a fence and jumped into a section of the world-famous display of China's Terracotta Army, damaging two ancient clay warriors, authorities said on Saturday. The 30-year-old was visiting the museum housing the Terracotta Army in the city of Xi'an on Friday when he "climbed over the guardrail and the protective net and jumped", public security officials said in a statement. The man surnamed Sun was found to "suffer from mental illness" and the case is under investigation. He "pushed and pulled" the clay warriors and two were "damaged to varying degrees", the statement said. He was "controlled" by security personnel. The pit he jumped into is up to 5.4m (18 feet) deep, according to the museum's website. Built around 209 BC to stand guard over the tomb of the first emperor, the 8,000-strong Terracotta Army is one of China's most important archaeological discoveries and considered a symbol of ancient Chinese artistic and military sophistication. A major tourist attraction in Xi'an, capital of the northern province of Shaanxi, it has been a Unesco world heritage site since 1987. A worker at the museum told AFP on Saturday that the display was open as usual. - AFP

New lighthouse artwork by Banksy discovered in Marseille: 'We love it'
New lighthouse artwork by Banksy discovered in Marseille: 'We love it'

The Star

time15 hours ago

  • The Star

New lighthouse artwork by Banksy discovered in Marseille: 'We love it'

This photograph shows a newly released artwork by street artist Banksy on the facade of a building in Marseille, southeastern France, on May 30, 2025. (Photo by Viken KANTARCI / AFP) A new mural depicting a lighthouse by world-famous street artist Banksy has appeared on a wall in the southern French city of Marseille, with AFP confirming its location on Friday. The anonymous artist known as Banksy revealed the new work on Instagram on Thursday but its location had not been disclosed. The words "I want to be what you saw in me" are stencilled in English across the black lighthouse set against a beige stucco wall. The mural is on quiet street near the Catalans beach not far from the city centre, according to an AFP correspondent. The lighthouse's painted shadow connects to one of the street bollards lining the sidewalk. A pedestrian takes a photograph of a newly released artwork by street artist Banksy on the facade of a building in Marseille, southeastern France, on May 30, 2025. — Photo: Viken KANTARCI/AFP Banksy – whose identity has not been publicly revealed – has crossed the globe for decades painting clandestine murals in public spaces, including in the occupied West Bank, London and Los Angeles. "It's fascinating that Banksy chose a city like Marseille, which has so much art, foreigners and life," said Esteban Roldan, a 42-year-old carpenter who came to see the artwork. "This is huge, Banksy in Marseille," added another local, Virginie Foucault. She said she was having lunch nearby. "I thought to myself, 'I'm not going to find it in Les Catalans,' and then, by chance – I never go there – there it is. We love it, we love it!" For Susan McAllister, a 60-year-old British teacher, "It was nice to have a little search to discover where it was. I'm happy I found it." "It's exciting, I'm happy he is exploring different places in different cities to display his art or her art," she said. "It might be a woman." Banksy is best known for hard-hitting murals, often using a distinctive stencilling style, that frequently pop up on buildings and walls. In recent years, he has kept the attention of the contemporary art world with his social commentaries and causes – migrants, opposition to Brexit, denunciation of Islamist radicals – while still stirring the excitement of the moneyed art markets. The artist boasts an A-list client lineup and has sold his works for tens of millions of pounds at auction since the early 2000s. – AFP

'M*A*S*H' actress Loretta Swit dead: Publicist
'M*A*S*H' actress Loretta Swit dead: Publicist

New Straits Times

time16 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

'M*A*S*H' actress Loretta Swit dead: Publicist

NEW YORK: Loretta Swit, the US actress who brought Major Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan to life in the seminal Korean War comedy series "M*A*S*H" has died. She was 87. Swit who played the high-strung but flirty Houlihan for the entire TV run of the smash series, was nominated for 10 Emmy awards for her work, winning two of them. Her death, at her home in Manhattan, was announced by her publicist, US media reported. AFP has sought confirmation. "M*A*S*H," which sprang from an Oscar-winning 1970 film, aired initially in 1972 and was a hit until it finished in 1983. The comedy was set in a mobile hospital for the US Army during the Korean War, and starred Alan Alda as Benjamin "Hawkeye" Pierce. The series tackled a range of issues from the tragic to the light-hearted, and was sometimes seen as a satire on US involvement in Vietnam – a war that was still happening when it first began airing.--AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store