Do We Really Need Spotify?

Somewhere along the way, listening stopped being yours.

Spotify isn’t necessary. It’s just convenient. That’s the part we don’t usually question. Convenience becomes the default, and the default starts to feel like something we can’t live without.

But we can.

There was a time when we chose music. We looked for it, stayed with it, and decided what mattered. Now, we scroll what’s given.

Discovery feels easier, but also narrower. The system suggests, filters, and lines things up. We follow.

Before, artists built listeners. They found people who chose to stay. Now, platforms decide what gets heard and what comes next.

Spotify is like fast food. You won’t die without it. You won’t grow because of it either. It feeds you, but it also decides what you taste next.

If you own an album—vinyl, cassette, or mp3—you can play it anytime, as much as you want. No interruptions. No limits. You can stay with it, repeat it, and experience it the way it was made.

With Spotify, it’s different. You don’t really own the music. You borrow it. Stop paying, and access changes. Don’t subscribe, and ads come in. The freedom to listen becomes conditional.

On Spotify, even how you listen can get flagged. Replay the same album again and again, and it can be treated as unusual activity. Access gets interrupted, and you may be asked to reset your account.

The way you enjoy music starts to depend on the platform.

These are the choices.

• Spotify — algorithm-heavy. You open it, it decides what plays next.
• Apple Music — you build your own library. Less push, more control.
• YouTube Music — you search, you find. Discovery follows curiosity.
• Bandcamp — you choose the artist and support them directly.
• SoundCloud — raw and open. Discovery feels unfiltered.

Spotify keeps you listening. The others lean more on your choice.

Even on a new album release, you press play and something else comes on. If you’re not subscribed, you don’t even get to follow the album as it is.

Music stayed the same. How we choose it changed.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Digital Albums by Darem Placer on Bandcamp
Listen. Support. Buy. Download.

Still Air

Staying still in the middle of everything.

For those who’d rather listen.

Move quietly through life. There is no need to react to everything. Let things pass when they must.

Walk forward even when the path is not clear. Not everything needs to be understood at once.

Stay calm before things take shape. Clarity arrives in its own time.

Hold steady between what is clear and what remains. Not everything needs to be resolved.

Keep balance at the center. Do not lean too far into noise or silence.

Let movement happen without overthinking. Not every step needs a reason.

Accept that things need not be perfect. Peace can already be enough.

Leave space in your life. Not everything needs to be closed or decided.

What remains is not the noise, but what truly matters.

Allow change to happen. Stay steady even as things shift.

Choose calm and gentle thoughts, even when the world feels wide and uncertain.

Let life flow without forcing limits or control.

After letting go, allow quiet to settle.

Continue forward even when direction is unclear.

Rest when nothing needs to be done. Stillness is part of living.

And in the end, recognize what remained—steady, present, and still.

Coming soon on Bandcamp

Tracklist
01. A Place That Doesn’t Ask You to Feel
02. Across Two Unseen Points
03. Before Shapes Emerge
04. Between Light and What Remains
05. Calm Across the Center
06. Drifting Without Asking Why
07. Everything Is Quiet Enough
08. Lines That Stay Open
09. Resonance Alone Remains
10. Shape That Never Settles
11. Soft Voices in an Empty Sky
12. Surface Without Edges
13. The Space After Letting Go
14. Through Unseen Paths
15. Where Nothing Needs to Happen
16. You Stayed

How does the album sound? Imagine drum and choir—a choir member lost his voice, so he plays the drums instead. 🥁🙃

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

The music of Darem Placer