$753
Zoë Keating is a cellist who loops her own instrument live. In 2019, she posted a document that read like something recovered from the ruins of a civilization that forgot how to pay people. Spotify: $753 for 206,011 plays. Bandcamp, where listeners bought albums outright: $25,575. Same artist. Same recordings. Same twelve months. Two business models, separated by a factor of thirty-four.
The document went quiet-viral. Every mid-career musician had a version. Every screenwriter who survived the 148-day WGA strike had one too. The numbers were not a scandal. They were the system working as designed.
The money came back
Recorded music revenue reached $17.1 billion in 2023 — higher, adjusted for inflation, than any year in history. The money came back. It just stopped arriving at the person holding the instrument.
Spotify pools every subscription dollar and divides by total streams. Drake’s billions dilute Keating’s rate. The top 1 percent capture roughly 90 percent of streaming revenue. A mid-tier musician who once sold 50,000 albums and earned $75,000 now watches the same audience stream the same record and generate $2,000. The audience did not shrink. The per-listen value collapsed.
Four readings
The creator advocates can show you the before-and-after royalty statements. They are not nostalgic for the major-label era — TLC went bankrupt at the height of their fame — but they insist the new extraction is more efficient because it has removed the floor entirely. The platform defenders built the recommendation engines and know that before streaming, the alternative was not the CD economy — it was Napster. Revenue had crashed to $6.7 billion by 2014. Every dollar Spotify pays is a dollar piracy would not have.
A songwriter in Nashville left her publishing deal in 2020 and now earns $14,000 a month from 2,100 Patreon subscribers. She is not famous. She owns everything. The market evolutionists see proof the old gatekeeping was always more destructive. The collective power camp watched the WGA strike win real gains in 148 days and thinks the answer is not individual escape routes but organized leverage against platforms that set rates in rooms where no working creator has a chair.
The royalty statement is still on Keating’s desk. Whether it represents a crime, a transition, or a liberation depends on which economy you believe is coming next.
A cellist earned $753 from Spotify and $25,575 from Bandcamp for the same music in the same year. Recorded-music revenue is at an all-time high. The money came back — it just stopped reaching the person holding the instrument.
Perspectives:
- Creator advocates
- Platform defenders
- Market evolutionists
- Collective power