The music wars that muted TikTok

The Detail - A podcast by RNZ

The ripples of a war in the music industry spread far further than just ruining Gen Alpha's TikTok time. When a music industry monster goes up against a social media behemoth, the result is an artistic scorched earth One of the biggest social media platforms is in an all-out war with the world's biggest record conglomerate.Universal Music Group has stopped licensing its music to TikTok and it's causing a big uproar.Today's episode of The Detail looks at why this really matters and how crucial social media is for musicians these days.Evie Orpe, co-host of RNZ podcast The TAHI is an avid user of TikTok."It's all vertical , it's short little bits and it does heavily rely on music. It's really sound and audio based, even though it's a video app," she says. "You add a sound that's already available on the app to your video."So how did this conflict all start? UMG and TikTok's licensing agreement was coming to an end in January. After months of negotiations they couldn't see eye to eye.So Universal removed all their music off the app."A lot of insiders and industry people are calling it the nuclear option or going scorched earth on the situation," Orpe says."UMG released a statement that said TikTok was trying to bully them into signing a bad deal, trying to take money away from artists. TikTok's saying should be happy for the free promotion."Orpe says artists are massively concerned about it - UMG might only have a 37 per cent share in the market but this might affect up to 80 per cent of the music - due to things like publishing and licensing deals."All of the small artists are so upset because they are like 'how am I supposed to get attention now?"I do think it will get solved, TikTok will find a way around it in the short term but long-term on an app that revolves around music and you can't have over four million songs on it, I mean, what are we doing?"The Detail also gets some insight into how important TikTok and social media is to musicians.Rapper and producer MazbouQ has over 200,000 followers on TikTok. He makes videos on rap and music theory, and they've helped him find an audience for his music."TikTok is an amazing platform for the sheer reason that its algorithm pushes out content automatically to people that you don't know and people who you're not connected to."Between TikTok and Instagram, predominately the social media exposure accounts for most of the music discovery."He says this has completely changed how musicians connect with their audiences…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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