Liz Pelly

American music journalist and author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liz Pelly is an American writer, journalist, and adjunct professor at New York University.[1] Her book Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, which critically examines the music streaming platform Spotify including the platform's promotion of fake artists, was published in 2025 by Hodder & Stoughton.

Born1990 (age 3536)[1]
Occupations
NotableworkMood Machine (2025)
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Liz Pelly
Born1990 (age 3536)[1]
Alma materBoston University
Occupations
Notable workMood Machine (2025)
RelativesJenn Pelly (twin sister)
Websitelizpelly.info
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Early life and education

Pelly grew up on Long Island. She has a twin sister named Jenn, who is also a music journalist and writer. They both wrote about music for their high school newspaper.[2]

Pelly started writing about music as a teenager for a local alt-weekly newspaper,[3] before studying journalism at Boston University.[4] While at university she was involved in college radio, which she says connected her "with the local music community and the underground scene".[3]

Career

After graduation, Pelly worked for The Boston Phoenix for its final two years[4] where she covered "the Occupy movement and [...] local organizing efforts".[3] In the mid-2010s, she lived at and was involved with running Silent Barn, a collectively run community art space in Brooklyn.[5] Whilst living there she began researching Spotify, and started writing essays about streaming for the blog of a music nonprofit called CASH Music and then for The Baffler.[3] In 2025 her first book, Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, was published by Hodder & Stoughton.[3][6] The book is a critical examination of Spotify including the platform's promotion of fake artists.[7]

Pelly's writing has been published by The Guardian, NPR, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, amongst others. She has appeared on radio shows and podcasts such as The New York Times Popcast, NPR's Morning Edition. She teaches in the recorded music program at New York University.[8]

References

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