Type in your question below and we'll check to see what answers we can find...
Loading article...
Submitting...
If you couldn't find any answers in the previous step then we need to post your question in the community and wait for someone to respond. You'll be notified when that happens.
Simply add some detail to your question and refine the title if needed, choose the relevant category, then post.
Before we can post your question we need you to quickly make an account (or sign in if you already have one).
Don't worry - it's quick and painless! Just click below, and once you're logged in we'll bring you right back here and post your question. We'll remember what you've already typed in so you won't have to do it again.
Please see below the most popular frequently asked questions.
Loading article...
Loading faqs...
Please see below the current ongoing issues which are under investigation.
Loading issue...
Loading ongoing issues...
For some reason lately, I'm finding more and more religious (mostly christian themed) music in playlists in my "made for you" area.
While I do appreciate choir and "solemn sounding" music, and really appreciate it when it celebrates humanity, I'm not fond of religions at large.
What would be the best way for me to "signal" the underlying "spotify system" that I do like the sounds of those tunes but I'd rather do without religious themes in my ears?
Imho they should be flaggable and excludable just as "explicit lyrics" ones as they can result just as offensive.
Thanks for help
cheers 🙂
Thank you Lalo for your answer.
I am indeed using that "dislike" feature for the song or artist.
But it feels a bit "broad and drastic" to me.
For instance of those songs I "disliked" I did like the music, I just didn't appreciate the lyrics, thus marking them feel a bit of a heavy choice and my fear is that "the system" would stop giving me that kind of music while I actually don't want those were the lyrics are some kind of prayer.
As I do agree is too much blacklisting artists would be too extreme: I, for instance, haven't used the "I don't like <rtist name>" feature in my discovery weakly, as I fear that would prevent me to possibly listen to other songs I might like from the same artist.
It's not about a song, an artist or a specific kind of music, it's about lyrics just as for the "explicit" ones, thus why I think the same thing you already have in place for explicit lyrics: https://community.spotify.com/t5/Live-Ideas/All-Platforms-Explicit-Filter/idi-p/3869 would work fine.
I agree. Overtly religious music should be easy to tag and exclude. I suspect spotify is worried Christian extremists will see it as discrimination but I'll bet if you were putting overtly religious music from other faiths in their streams just because they like one 'sacred music' song they'd be complaining too. How about just quietly is a user clicks 'unlike/block' on a 10+ songs that all have overt religious content, to just assume they don't like that content and stop suggesting it to them? Its just good customer service. And yes, I'm a paid subscriber.
Maybe try interacting more with songs with the sounds you like that done have a religious theme (liking, adding to playlists) and hiding songs that you do not want to continue to hear. Do this by clicking on the ellipses for the song and selecting "hide song."
I agree that explicitly Christian or heavy handed religious music should be marked as such, and you should be able to screen it the way you do with explicit lyrics. Surely, the providers mark it with something like Christian music, or sacred music as a genre when it's that overt? Something an algorythm could detect or just something you could check off that you never want? For example, because Iisten to Dolly Parton and she occasionally has music with religious themes, and also listen to country, spotify seems to have decided that I am a hard core Christian (I have another faith and I'm gay), and it's really annoying. I don't seek out christian music, and I don't enjoy it. I click dislike or hide whenever it comes up and I am given that option, but it gets pretty annoying when it's every second song. Again, I'm a paid subscriber and this is what I, a customer, would like to see.
I'd like to put this useful thread into a wider and more objective context. While a church leader myself, I absolutely agree with the OP and most of the commentators. When I want to listen to faith music, I play albums that are in my own spiritual and aesthetic comfort zone—I don't want to hear random playlists including stuff that other people might find truly uplifting. Even more than that, I don't want to hear music from other religious cultures, occult, obscene or anti-religious songs, etc). And unlike some people, I have utter respect for people of different faiths, spiritualities and worldviews, and I don't expect Spotify or indeed society at large to give preferential treatment to music/beliefs/ideas that I'm comfortable with. Be who you are with my blessing.
But this applies equally to different styles of music. I occasionally want to listen to classical music, jazz, country, and all kinds of other things. And my biggest gripe with Spotify is that I have to ruthlessly exclude these from my albums and playlists because otherwise they randomly clog up and ruin the atmosphere of the Made For You playlists that are my main (and sometimes reluctant) reason for staying with Spotify at all.
I know Spotify is a wondrous creature, and I suspect that it depends for its financial sustainability on expanding people's listening habits. But sometimes the MFY playlists wander just too far out of my zone. And surely Spotify could extend its Hide/Don't Play functionality in such a way that we can keep albums and playlists in our Library that reflect all aspects of our listening habits, while marking certain genres/albums/playlists not to influence Spotify's recommendations.
Hey there you, Yeah, you! 😁 Welcome - we're glad you joined the Spotify Community! While you here, let's have a fun game and get…