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Taylor Swift defends pulling her music from Spotify

LOS ANGELES — Taylor Swift does not want to be a part of your system, Spotify.

Singer Taylor Swift performs on ABC's Good Morning America to promote her new album "1989" in New York, in this file photo taken October 30, 2014. Photo: REUTERS

Singer Taylor Swift performs on ABC's Good Morning America to promote her new album "1989" in New York, in this file photo taken October 30, 2014. Photo: REUTERS

LOS ANGELES — Taylor Swift does not want to be a part of your system, Spotify.

After it was revealed Monday (Nov 3) that Swift’s entire catalogue of music was pulled from the streaming service, Swift defended the decision yesterday.

“All I can say is that music is changing so quickly, and the landscape of the music industry itself is changing so quickly, that everything new, like Spotify, all feels to me a bit like a grand experiment,” Swift said in an interview with Yahoo! Music.

“And I’m not willing to contribute my life’s work to an experiment that I don’t feel fairly compensates the writers, producers, artists, and creators of this music.”

The decision may have paid off, as “1989” became her third consecutive album to cross 1 million sales in its first week, making her the first artist in history to achieve the feat. Addressing reports that initially projected her opening sales much lower, Swift said her goal was to make something people still wanted to pay for even in a shift economic landscape for the music industry.

“I hoped that I had created something that people would want to buy, but I didn’t know what’s been happening in people’s minds... I just was hoping and praying that people still perceived there to be a value to someone’s musical creation,” she said. VARIETY.COM/REUTERS

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