Iranian streaming website uses Photoshop to remove women from album covers

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Djudjic is a multi-talented artist based in Novi Sad, Serbia. With 15 years of experience as a photographer, she specializes in capturing the beauty of nature, travel, concerts, and fine art. In addition to her photography, Dunja also expresses her creativity through writing, embroidery, and jewelry making.

An Iranian music streaming website Melovaz recently came under fire for removing images of women from album covers. World-famous artists like Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, and Lana Del Ray were removed from the artwork of their own albums. What’s more, if the album covers featured men – these men were left intact, while the women were photoshopped out.

When I stumbled upon this story, I browsed a bit through Melovaz in search of albums and singles by female artists. Indeed, the images of female artists had been removed from the covers of their own albums. In fact, even a sketched woman was removed from one (just check out Nicki Minaj’s album art below).

Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot
Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot

Interestingly enough, men were left intact. Even if an album comes from a female artist, if its cover features a man, you’ll still see him there. Take a look at Lana Del Ray’s album cover, for example.

Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot

There is one case where the man was photoshopped out, too. I wonder why though. It could have been a mistake.

Melovaz screenshot
Spotify screenshot

Fan bases have been reacting to these photoshopped album covers on Melovaz, mainly via Twitter. Iggy Azalea tweeted: “The jokes on them cause I put a vagina reference in every song so who really won.”

https://twitter.com/iggyazalea/status/1178368041295462401?lang=en

“The edits are a major symptom of the harsh restrictions on women’s self-expression, especially in music, that are institutionalized in Iran under Islamic law,” Insider writes. “The country maintains under the law that it is illegal under most circumstances for a woman to be seen uncovered, and in this case, that seems to apply to women who don’t outwardly practice Islam, and aren’t physically in the country.”

We encountered a similar case of photoshopping album covers and wrote about it back in 2017. The reason was the same – to make the album art comply with Islamic modesty laws. However, the women were still present on those album covers, only “dressed” with some help from Photoshop. In the case of Melovaz, they have been completely removed from album art.

I absolutely don’t want to get political and discuss the laws of a country I don’t live in. But I know one thing: if I were a singer and I was removed from my own album art… I wouldn’t be pleased, to say the least.

Insider reached out to Melovaz for a comment, but there’s no update yet. Still, at the time of writing this, the altered album covers remain on the website.

[via FStoppers, Insider]


Filed Under:

Tagged With:

Find this interesting? Share it with your friends!

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Djudjic is a multi-talented artist based in Novi Sad, Serbia. With 15 years of experience as a photographer, she specializes in capturing the beauty of nature, travel, concerts, and fine art. In addition to her photography, Dunja also expresses her creativity through writing, embroidery, and jewelry making.

Join the Discussion

DIYP Comment Policy
Be nice, be on-topic, no personal information or flames.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

5 responses to “Iranian streaming website uses Photoshop to remove women from album covers”

  1. Claudio Grieco Avatar
    Claudio Grieco

    Did they remove the female voices too?

  2. W Douglas LeBlanc Avatar

    How about we photoshop Iran from the Earth.

    1. Shannon Der Aldinger Avatar
      Shannon Der Aldinger

      Would be a nice place for another inland sea.

  3. Shannon Der Aldinger Avatar
    Shannon Der Aldinger

    Wonder what they would do with the Voodoo-U cover …

  4. Tim Gould Avatar

    I sure I recall albums being sold in the UK in an outer sleeve when the cover was deemed offensive. Not so much nowadays, but maybe 25-30 years ago. That’s how you deal with cultural sensitivity to imagery – or don’t sell the product.
    What this website is doing is just as offensive to western sensibilities, as well as being a personal insult to the artist.
    This is also heading into legal territory about selling the album with different artwork.