Electro-pop group Blood on the Dance Floor had their entire catalog pulled from Spotify, over alleged violations of the streaming service’s content policy. Blood on the Dance floor is under fire after MetalSucks and Huffington Post detailed allegations against frontman Dahvie Vanity (real name Jesus David Torres) from 21 women, who say they were forced to perform sexual acts by Torres, including several women who were minors at the time.
The allegations date back to 2007 before Torres formed Blood on the Dance Floor, and accuse Torres of everything from molestation to rape. A number of his former band members have also publicly accused him of inappropriate conduct with underaged women.
While police are reported to be investigating the allegations against him, at this time, Torres has not been charged with any crime.
However, Spotify told HuffPo that Blood on the Dance Floor’s music was not removed in connection with the allegations, but for violations of the streaming service’s policy against hate content as several of their songs contain lyrics which describe sexually humiliating or killing women.
Spotify has attempted to remove music for violations of its content policy in the past to mixed results. Last May, Spotify pulled music by R&B artist R. Kelly and the now-deceased Soundcloud rapper XXXTentacion from its playlists but were forced to walk the decision back amid backlash on social media and from the industry.
At the time, Spotify boss Daniel Ek noted that the company could have done a “better job” and was not attempting to police artists’ morals. They later dropped the controversial “hateful conduct” clause from their terms of service but left a provision on hate content in place.