Neil Young calls on Spotify staff to quit platform 'before it eats up your soul'


Singer-songwriter Neil Younger has requested staff of Spotify to stop their jobs whereas urging individuals to withdraw their cash from huge American banks, in protests over coronavirus misinformation and local weather change.


Younger, in an announcement on his web site, criticized the music streaming platform's chief government officer, Daniel Ek, saying he was the principle downside, within the wake of criticism of U.S. podcaster Joe Rogan, who has courted controversy together with his views on COVID-19 vaccines and his use of racial slurs.


Spotify hosts the top-rated podcast "The Joe Rogan Expertise" podcast.


"In our communication age, misinformation is the issue. Ditch the misinformers," Younger stated within the assertion.


The rock star pulled his content material from the streaming platform final month after objecting to his music being performed on the identical platform as Rogan's podcast, over what Younger stated was deceptive data on vaccines.


A number of outstanding figures together with singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, guitarist Nils Lofgren and best-selling U.S. professor and creator Brene Brown adopted go well with.


Younger additionally urged individuals to maneuver their cash out of multinational banks JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc, Financial institution of America Corp and Wells Fargo & Co, calling them "injury causers" for his or her funding of fossil fuels.


Rogan has apologized for each the racial slurs and the controversy over COVID vaccines.


Younger's feedback come a day after Ek instructed his workers that whereas he condemned the slurs utilized by Rogan, the corporate wouldn't be silencing him.


Addressing staff of the music platform, Younger stated: "I say Daniel Ek is your huge downside - not Joe Rogan. Get out of that place earlier than it eats up your soul."


Younger additionally urged fellow musicians and artists to take their output elsewhere.


The platform noticed greater than US$2 billion wiped off its market worth final week amid the uproar over COVID misinformation.


The corporate has stated it could add a "content material advisory" to any episode that features dialogue of the coronavirus.

(Reporting by Mrinmay Dey and Bhargav Acharya in Bengaluru; modifying by Robert Birsel) 

  • Neil Young

    Neil Younger poses for a portrait in Santa Monica, Calif. on Sept. 9, 2019. (Picture by Rebecca Cabage/Invision/AP, File)

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