Music Business Worldwide
UMG Chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge discussed artist opt-in protections for AI at a trade summit in Los Angeles, hours after his company announced a licensing deal with Spotify for AI-powered covers and remixes. Grainge emphasized the importance of opt-in protections for artists.
Zinstrel
Marcus Lawrence at Zinstrel maps five AI music platforms beyond the headline lawsuits: Riffle (browser collaboration), Tamber (DAW-integrated production), Soundverse (ethical training data), Tensorpunk (local plugin tools), and ElevenLabs (licensed generation + creator marketplace). The frame: AI music is maturing past raw model power into platform bets on collaboration, ethics, and economic sustainability.
Ted Gioia
The argument here is structural: Spotify ran a classic audience-capture playbook — low prices to build lock-in, now three price hikes in under three years to harvest it. The piece frames streaming subscribers as the proverbial frog in boiling water, and raises the question of whether that squeeze creates real vulnerability as the streaming landscape shifts.
MUSIC x
MUSIC x uses a speculative 2034 policy convention as a frame to argue that the music industry's AI licensing deals repeated the same mistake as Spotify-era settlements: institutional compromise that worked for majors and solved nothing for working artists.