44% of All New Music on Deezer Is AI-Generated — But Almost Nobody Is Actually Listening to It

At first glance, the numbers look apocalyptic.
According to Deezer’s own data released today, 44% of all tracks uploaded to the platform in recent months are AI-generated. That’s roughly 75,000 new AI tracks every single day.
If you were writing the classic “AI is killing music” story, this would be the perfect opening paragraph — complete with dramatic music-industry death knell.
But the real story is far more nuanced… and a lot less terrifying for human artists.
The Numbers Behind the Flood

Even more telling: up to 85% of those AI-generated plays come from the AI creators themselves (or automated bots) artificially inflating the numbers in an attempt to game the royalty system and earn payouts.
In other words, the platform is being flooded with machine-made slop — but the audience is overwhelmingly… other machines.
Deezer Is Actually Doing Something About It

The French streaming service appears to be the only major platform that is actively:
- Detecting AI-generated tracks at upload;
- Clearly labeling them as AI;
- Removing them from algorithmic recommendations and playlists.
If you want to listen to AI music on Deezer, you have to go looking for it manually. The platform won’t push it into your Discover Weekly or radio stations.
This stands in stark contrast to Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music, which have been far slower (or less transparent) about handling the flood of generative content.
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What It Really Means

Most of it is low-effort background music, ambient filler, or blatant royalty farming. The tiny fraction that actually gets real human listens is still negligible compared to human-created music.
Human artists continue to dominate meaningful engagement, discovery, and cultural conversation — exactly as they always have.
The real challenge isn’t that AI music is taking over listeners’ ears. It’s that platforms now have to spend real resources filtering an ocean of automated content just to keep the service usable.
Deezer’s approach — detection, labeling, and de-recommendation — is currently the most responsible stance in the industry. Whether other streamers will follow remains to be seen.
For now, the robots are uploading like crazy… but the humans are still the ones actually hitting play.