Talk:Chlöe Howl

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Unavailable?[edit]

A while ago I made a playlist of Chloe's songs on Apple Music, but when I tried playing it recently the tracks were no longer available. On checking other sources the picture is much the same: none of the tracks she made with Sony appear to be available in the UK on Amazon, Spotify, Apple Music or iTunes Store. Her official Vevo videos still seem to be available on YouTube, but not on Vevo's own platform. I guess this is all to do with her situation with Sony, but it's annoying! I bought a couple of downloads of her songs quite early on, but didn't buy any others as I thought they would be on an album soon, and meanwhile I could hear them on Spotify. But maybe they are available somewhere else (legally) so I hope someone can clarify, or say whether they will be available in future.109.150.6.191 (talk) 19:52, 10 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Her music was pulled sometime around the 21st December. According to these two tweets (1 and 2) it was as much a surprise to her as to everyone else. That's all I know. Pasicles (talk) 23:00, 11 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Reason why Chloe quit Sony and her YouTube Vevo removal[edit]

I think it's worth noting that Chlöe Howl, like many other actresses, quit Sony due to Ke$ha career being frozen by Sony after she accussed her producer of sexual assault. Sony being unsympathetic caused an exodus of female artists to leave, Chlöe Howl is one of them. Sony responded the only how they knew, by throwing copyrights on all songs produced by those artists which caused Chlöe Howl's YouTube Vevo account to remove all her songs. For a brief time in YouTube, finding any of her soungs were rare. Being songless, YouTube deleted the Vevo account. I had added it but I lack sources so I'm sticking it here as a to-do, to acquire sources, such. --94.234.39.165 (talk) 22:00, 19 February 2020 (UTC)[reply]

That's quite an assumption of her contract relationship with Sony (Columbia Records) and an allegation against Sony's conduct. As you point out, none of what you've written is sourced. A source I have found is an actual interview with Chloe Howel where she says "But as somebody who's been dropped the push is going to come from yourself and not a big company's support." In the context of the article, it seems to mean she's referring to when she was dropped from Columbia.[1]

References

  1. ^ "Chlöe Howl: 'It's really heartwarming that people are still interested in me' ahead of sold-out London show". MyLondon. 6 November 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2021.