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Julia Wolf coming to Glasgow as part of first UK tour

Julia Wolf coming to Glasgow as part of first UK tour

Glasgow Times6 days ago

Julia Wolf, who has nearly three million monthly listeners on Spotify, is best known for tunes like In My Room and Iris, which features Machine Gun Kelly (MGK).
The star, who hails from Queens, New York, released her first album back in 2021 and released her Sophomore album, Pressure, in 2025.
READ NEXT: Popular band formed in 1990s to play show in Glasgow's West End
The upcoming Glasgow show will take place at the Cathouse nightclub in the city centre on Friday, December 5.
Announcing the news on Instagram, the singer wrote: "My first ever EU/UK headline tour!"
Those planning on attending the Glasgow date were buzzing.
One person said: "Yay amazing, see you in Glasgow."
Another said: "Glasgow! I'm screaming."
A third added: "See you in Glasgow."
READ NEXT: Scottish star who collaborated with iconic singer announces Glasgow gig
Tickets for the Glasgow show will go on sale on May 30 at 10am.
Pre-sale will be available from 10am on May 29.
To purchase tickets, visit www.gigsinscotland.com/artist/julia-wolf

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AI, bot farms and innocent indie victims: how music streaming became a hotbed of fraud and fakery
AI, bot farms and innocent indie victims: how music streaming became a hotbed of fraud and fakery

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

AI, bot farms and innocent indie victims: how music streaming became a hotbed of fraud and fakery

There is a battle gripping the music business today around the manipulation of streaming services – and innocent indie artists are the collateral damage. Fraudsters are flooding Spotify, Apple Music and the rest with AI-generated tracks, to try and hoover up the royalties generated by people listening to them. These tracks are cheap, quick and easy to make, with Deezer estimating in April that over 20,000 fully AI-created tracks – that's 18% of new tracks – were being ingested into its platform daily, almost double the number in January. The fraudsters often then use bots, AI or humans to endlessly listen to these fake songs and generate revenue, while others are exploiting upload services to get fake songs put on real artists' pages and siphon off royalties that way. 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Universal Music Group (UMG), the biggest record company in the world, has been accused by Drake of conspiring to increase the play count of Kendrick Lamar's diss track Not Like Us, an allegation UMG denies. The Guardian has spoken to multiple artists who found themselves at the sharp end of this war on manipulation, where unexpected spikes in streams get taken as proof of guilt. Darren Hemmings is managing director of music marketing company Motive Unknown and a musician himself. His distributor recently informed him that a track on one EP, having jumped from 'a few plays a day' to more than 1,000, was guilty of manipulation. 'I wouldn't blame them for drawing that conclusion,' he says, but 'it's very judge, jury, executioner'. He did not manipulate the streams, but could not identify the root cause – other than it simply becoming popular with actual listeners. 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Sabrina Carpenter bares all in cheeky teaser clip as she hints at next project
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time7 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Sabrina Carpenter bares all in cheeky teaser clip as she hints at next project

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Ruby Ru by Iris in Dubai
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