Months after the band withdrew its catalogue from Spotify in protest, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard found a new affront: an account calling itself “King Lizard Wizard” uploaded what appeared to be AI-generated versions of the group’s songs to the platform the band had abandoned. According to the original report, each upload carried the same titles and lyrics as genuine King Gizzard tracks, and some even listed frontman Stu Mackenzie as composer and lyricist. [1][2]
The counterfeit releases gained traction through Spotify’s recommendation systems, appearing in users’ Release Radar playlists and amassing tens of thousands of streams before the tracks were taken down. Industry reporting and platform statements indicate the content remained on the service for weeks, illustrating how algorithmic curation can amplify unauthorised AI impersonations. [1][4]
Spotify removed the material and said no royalties were paid, citing its artist impersonation policy. The company updated that policy in September, saying “Unauthorised use of AI to clone an artist’s voice exploits their identity, undermines their artistry, and threatens the fundamental integrity of their work,” and stressing that licensing a voice should be a choice that rests with the artist. The platform characterised the offending uploads as a breach of those rules. [1]
The episode has resonated more strongly because it follows King Gizzard’s July decision to withdraw from Spotify in protest at CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in Helsing, a defence company developing AI-driven military drones. The band announced the boycott on social media and moved its catalogue to alternative outlets and a Bandcamp “name your price” model, part of a wider wave of artists raising ethical concerns about streaming platforms and their leadership links to AI and defence projects. [3][6]
Frontman Stu Mackenzie expressed bemusement and alarm at the duplication. According to the original report, Mackenzie told The Music he was “trying to see the irony in this situation,” adding, “But seriously wtf we are truly doomed.” Those words have been widely quoted in coverage that stresses musicians’ growing anxiety about AI tools that can mimic style and voice. [1][2][5]
Observers say the incident underscores persistent enforcement and detection challenges for streaming services confronting AI-generated content. Data and commentary from multiple outlets note that while platforms can remove impersonations and deny payments retroactively, the systems that surface music to listeners remain vulnerable to manipulation, raising questions about how rights, identity and attribution will be policed as generative audio tools proliferate. [4][7]
The removal of the King Lizard Wizard uploads demonstrates both the practical limits of current safeguards and the reputational stakes for platforms: companies can and do delete impersonating material, but the interim exposure, placement in playlists and sizable stream counts, can still inflict harm. The episode adds to a mounting chorus of artists, commentators and publications pressing streaming services for clearer, faster protections against unauthorised AI exploitation of creative work. [1][4][7]
📌 Reference Map:
##Reference Map:
- [1] (Live For Live Music) - Paragraph 1, Paragraph 2, Paragraph 3, Paragraph 5, Paragraph 7
- [2] (The Guardian) - Paragraph 1, Paragraph 5
- [3] (NME) - Paragraph 4
- [4] (Engadget) - Paragraph 2, Paragraph 6, Paragraph 7
- [5] (MusicRadar) - Paragraph 5
- [6] (Wikipedia) - Paragraph 4
- [7] (Digital Music News) - Paragraph 6, Paragraph 7
Source: Noah Wire Services