See why Snoop Dogg’s billion-stream earning debate led him to Tune.FM’s crypto-powered platform, changing music payments one track at a time.
Hip-hop legend Snoop Dogg pulls in almost 30 million monthly listeners on Spotify, yet he’s now shifting his entire catalogue to Tune.FM, a Web3 streaming platform built on Hedera’s blockchain. This change arrives alongside his latest single, “Spaceship Party,” which dropped on February 28.
The decision comes on the heels of Snoop’s outspoken critique of Spotify’s payment model. During the Business Untitled podcast late last year, he revealed that over a billion Spotify streams earned him less than $45,000. He viewed that as a wake-up call. Spotify insists its model supports artists at all levels, but Snoop sees it differently. He’s been candid about how streaming platforms pocket most of the cash, leaving creators with limited returns.
Although still currently still on Spotify, the frustration has fueled his plan to move to Tune.FM and cut ties with older services.
Tune.FM aims to give power back to the artists. It features per-second payouts using a native cryptocurrency called JAM. Listeners pay directly, and artists receive immediate compensation for every moment their music gets played. That streamlined approach differs from standard platforms that can take months to distribute earnings as artists want faster and fairer payment.
Tension with Spotify boiled over as Snoop shared his payout figures from a billion streams. Many fans were shocked that such a small sum could come from so much traction. Although Spotify denied unfair treatment and stated to TMZ that it pays out billions to the music industry annually, Snoop felt those billions never truly reached most creators.
This situation also highlights a broader pain point for many musicians. They see streaming giants hold most of the leverage, and payments often stay hidden behind complex industry structures. When Snoop announced his departure, he told Billboard he doesn’t “f*** with Spotify anymore,” a statement that made headlines and put a spotlight on alternative platforms like Tune.FM.
Source Tune.FM
Built on Hedera’s Hashgraph, Tune.FM is more than just streaming. It also doubles as an NFT marketplace, allowing artists to mint unique digital assets tied to songs, merchandise, and beyond. Hedera’s technology processes transactions in seconds and keeps fees so low that even tiny payments stay viable.
That’s a huge benefit for creators who rely on every bit of revenue. There’s no guesswork about where the money goes because the blockchain ledger tracks each transaction.
JAM is the official token on Tune.FM and powers this payment system. Fans stream a track, and the artist sees an instant payout. There’s no middleman chipping away at earnings.
That transparency resonates with Snoop, who has championed blockchain and NFTs as the future of music. He doesn’t want to rely on a service that decides his share. Tune.FM removes that worry. His Death Row Records catalog, plus new material, will now live under a more direct compensation model.
Musicians have voiced their frustrations with traditional streaming payouts for years. Snoop Dogg’s jump to Tune.FM might be the spark that pushes other artists to follow suit.
If Tune.FM proves successful in delivering fair earnings; it could reshape streaming and welcome more users into Web3. Major platforms may feel pressure to adopt fairer payment models to avoid losing more headliners. Listeners also get something new: the ability to support artists directly, knowing their money goes straight to the people behind the music.
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