Why Does Charley Crockett Appear In Paul Cauthen Searches on Spotify?

April 3rd was a big release day in the independent country realm, with a couple heavy hitters releasing major albums on the same day. While Charley Crockett released the third installment from his “Sagebrush Trilogy” called Age of the Ram, Paul Cauthen released his latest record Book of Paul. The Droptines, Luke Grimes, Shelby Stone, Same Barber, and Heath James Hardin (Olds Sleeper), and others also released important records.
Since Charley Crockett and Paul Cauthen are both artists that are originally from Texas and generally reside in the retro style of country music (or the “hipster” side if you will), nobody should be surprised to see both their names on the same playlists, festival posters, and other such things. Clearly the two have very distinctly different approaches to music, but many listeners are apt to be fans of both.
That said, there’s at least somewhat of a rivalry between the two, or at least no love lost. In September of 2025, Paul Cauthen took to social media to very directly call Charley Crockett out for basically being a fraud.
“Stop being a pathological liar and thinking that you’re something that you’re not. You’re just a singer that’s ripping off the past, that’s bringing it in like it’s your blood and your sh-t. Well, you’re not related to Davy Crockett and you’re not fu–ing Bob Wills. So just go play,” Cauthen said in part.
That’s why I was surprised that when searching on Spotify for the new Paul Cauthen album by quite literally entering “Paul Cauthen,” the very first thing that came up and in highlighted form was Charley Crockett’s Age of the Ram, not Paul Cauthen, or his new album Book of Paul.

Recommending Age of the Ram to someone who might be a Paul Cauthen fan makes some sense. But to recommend Charley Crockett and Age of the Ram over the actual artist and the actual album you’re looking for? That not only seems counter-productive. It seems a little scandalous. How and why would Spotify allow such a thing?
Shocked at this search result, I screenshot it, completely closed out of the Spotify app, then re-opened it, and tried searching specifically for Paul Cauthen, but in the album category. Once again, Charley Crockett came up first.

Something else that’s interesting is that when filling out the search window, when the auto-complete suggestions populated as I started typing in Paul Cauthen’s name, it wasn’t Paul Cauthen’s album that came up first in the suggestion tree, but Charley Crockett’s.

Since I had been listening to both albums lately, I wondered if that might be the reason I was receiving these suggestions. So I deleted cache and cookies, tried separate devices, asked buddies to do a search and see what they came up with. Most every time, the search results for Paul Cauthen still came up with Charley Crockett on top, and over multiple days, devices, and users.
To be fair, there were a few times Cauthen actually did come up first, especially on mobile devices. But even then Crockett and/or Age of the Ram was still very high in the search results, including one time where I searched “Paul Cauthen,” a few of his songs came up first, but Charley Crockett’s artist account still came up before Paul’s account.
Another search did bring up Book of Paul first as it should have, but Charley Crockett second above other Paul Cauthen suggestions.


But the two graphics above were the exception, not the rule. So this made me wonder if there were other artists who if you searched for them, Charley Crockett would come up first, especially performers who might be somewhat aligned with the same style or subgenre as Charley Crockett. So I tried Charles Wesley Godwin, but that didn’t result in anything. Then I tried Drayton Farley, Cody Jinks, and a few others. No dice.
Then I put in The Wilder Blue. Though Age of the Ram didn’t come up first, it definitely came up higher than you would expect, right under The Wilder Blue’s artist profile, and above any album from The Wilder Blue themselves.

So what does all of this mean?
First, let’s not assume that whatever is happening here is something nefarious from Charley Crockett himself, or that it’s even targeted at Paul Cauthen specifically since it appears to be affecting other artist searches as well.
Spotify does have a “Discovery Mode” featurem, which a way that artists and labels can accept a lower royalty rate (there’s a 30% commission fee) to have music boosted to help it “stand out” as Spotify likes to say. This is usually done via algorithmic recommendations like the song that plays after the song or album you searched for finishes (Autoplay), or Spotify’s “Radio” feature for artists or genres.
Discovery Mode has been criticized for being a modern version of payola, giving an advantage to artists with deep pockets who can pay for the privilege of getting played more, playlisted more, and in this instance, maybe even being goosed in searches for other artists, making it more likely you’ll interact with their music. In the attention economy, exposure and what comes up first is everything.
However, Spotify’s Discovery Mode is generally not available for an album or a track until 30 days after it has been released, so it seems unlikely that’s what is going on here with the Charley Crockett/Paul Cauthen searches. Discovery Mode definitely does play a role in what you interface with on Spotify, and where.
Recently while at an Easter shindig, someone was playing the Red Clay Stray’s Spotify Radio channel. As you can guess, there was a lot of Red Clay Strays, some Zach Bryan and Turnpike Troubadours, Sturgill Simpson and Tyler Childers in the mix. But I was rather stupefied to hear a strong presence of Gavin Adcock in the playlist as well—someone who’s had public altercations with both Zach Bryan, Charley Crockett, and other independent country artists.
The 50-song playlist had a curiously tight range of artist featured, and Gavin Adcock had six selections. In the independent country world, Gavin Adcock isn’t just polarizing, he’s absolutely vilified, even if in the mainstream world, they equate Gavin to artists like The Red Clay Strays, Paul Cauthen, and Charley Crockett. Very likely the reason Gavin Adcock appears on that playlist is due to Discovery Mode activations.
Many Spotify users complain about Spotify’s recommendations these days, though the streaming giant used to be curiously spot-on with their selections, and one of the best streaming companies for true organic discovery. Now if you’re searching for Paul Cauthen, you might get served up Charley Crockett who Cauthen called a fraud. Or if you’re listening to Zach Bryan, a Gavin Adcock track might play next when they recently almost went fisticuffs, just like it currently does on Red Clay Strays Radio. Ironically, artists don’t control who is on their own radio stations.

All of this is presented to make the public aware. Why does one artist rise and another artist fall? Why does it seem to make no sense why your favorite artist or band struggles for traction while someone like Gavin Adcock puts together massive streaming numbers? It’s because of the way these algorithms work, how they game our attention, and how we interact with them.
Charley Crockett is one of the hardest working guys in country music. Age of the Ram was his third album in a year. And again, he might not have any idea that any of this is happening, let alone had any say so in it himself. Crockett coming up in Paul Cauthen searches could simply be a bug in the system for all we know, or it could be the search algorithm adopting to a curious amount of searches for Charley Crockett.
Ultimately, it’s these kinds of instances that increase the gulf between the have’s and the have not’s. It’s unlikely this is an isolated incident in the Spotify universe. It’s probably happening to numerous artists and across genres. Users are pulling up different artists than they ones they’re searching for, resulting in a redirection of attention to artists they didn’t originally intend to listen to.
As algorithms get gamed by paid-for schemes, and are more automated than ever with the human element taken out of the equation—and now AI making many of the decisions of what you’re listening to—music consumers should be more aware of what’s happening.
Streaming companies, Instagram, and TikTok can still be useful for discovery to a certain extent. But good old-fashioned word of mouth, playlists curated by humans, and music outlets and influencers that refuse “pay to play” models is really the best way to know you’re getting honest to goodness recommendations coming straight from the heart as opposed to what you’re being pushed by the industry, no different than corporate country radio.
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Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect that “Discovery Mode” on Spotify is not available until 30 days after a song or album is released.

April 8, 2026 @ 7:56 am
Very strange. I tested out by searching Gavin Adcock and narrowing it down to albums. Zach Top and Turnpike Troubadours came up as the 6th and 7th results. Not complaining, maybe some Gavin fan will get good taste and stumble upon them?
April 8, 2026 @ 7:57 am
Good piece Trig.
This algo goosing happens in music but it NEVER happens in the news…
Right?
April 8, 2026 @ 8:14 am
Interesting. I tested that right away. The first thing that pops up when I type in “Paul Cauthen” is Red Bird, Luke Grimes’ new album.🤔
April 8, 2026 @ 9:25 am
The “Red Bird” album by Luke Grimes was released on the same day as the new Paul Cauthen and Charley Crockett albums. If that’s the FIRST thing that comes up when you search for Paul Cauthen, that is just nothing short of a catastrophe or a controversy of how Spotify is fulfilling searches. And though it might present differently for different users, I have no dout this issue is pervasive throughout the Spotify eco system and is very directly resulting in users clicking on the top recommended album that is NOT what they originally searched for.
I don’t know what’s causing this. But it is definitely something that deserves to be looked into further.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:14 am
this kind of thing has been happening to me for a while on streaming services (i usually don’t use Spotify, and I’ve been using YouTube Music for years, but I sometimes check what’s happening on Spotify SPECIFICALLY because I noticed that there are weird games going on with the algorithm about 2+ years ago).
If I search for women artists I get almost entirely men in the recommendations if I turn on the mix or radio feature
If I search for or listen to independent artists it almost immediately tries to send me to a bunhc of Morgan Wallen who I have literally never once not one time listened to on purpose.
Im a power user of Youtube and I listen to an incredible array of specifically independent artists and my listening history is probably 35% women. If I use Spotify in the exact same way, the Spotify algorithm will absolutely not listen to me on this most of the time.
Youtube is a bit better but it really feels like the algorith is kind of hit and miss. Sometimes it sends me down an incredible rabbit hole of super obscure young artists or super obscure old music if i’m listening to classic country. But Spotify hasn’t done so in years.
I haven’t paid attention to the autocompletes but I have also noticed that search is worse now. Its’ part of good ol’ enshittification- the term for when tech companies have made things worse for the user under the idea that if you are lost and clicking around, they can show you more ads. Incidentally I don’t see ads since I pay for YT Music but the search has definitely gotten worse on the music side of it, mostly by showing me a wider selection of things that might be remotely possibly just maybe be related. This is a different issue than the algorithm issue I bitch about all the time here.
April 8, 2026 @ 8:23 am
For discovering new music, the Spotify algorithms are too narrow. Regardless of genre, mood, or any other description for a playlist that was created “just for me,” I’ll get some variation of 5 of my top 10-15 bands.
If I want to discover actual new music mixed in with a favorite band/songs, then I go to Pandora.
April 8, 2026 @ 8:34 am
Interesting. I’m sure our resident ‘genius’ Strait will have some ideas 😉
April 8, 2026 @ 8:45 am
We all know that you are so emotionally fragile that you can only handle opinions that directly match your own.
This same thing did not happen on Spotify on my iphone when I searched Paul Cauthen.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:00 am
Unless either party admits to what exactly happened – there is no way to know. It seems more likely that Charley Crockett paid to have his album boosted on Spotify vs some sort of ‘glitch’ happening on the Spotify side. Since Discovery Mode is a feature of Spotify I consider it a ‘grey area’ at worst. Sure I don’t want Spotify ‘jacking’ their algorithm like Pandora to where it’s completely annoying to let songs autoplay but payolla has always existed and it won’t destroy music. I just find it funny when Charley Crockett is placed second, only to Jesus for having good intentions and being beyond criticism.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:20 am
Popular independent artists exist in a weird place on apps like Spotify. They don’t get a lot of searches compared to the mainstream artists, but they do get enough to get noticed by the algorithm and when people search for the wrong artist/song combination it wouldn’t take many of those to affect search results. Charley Crockett-Cocaine Country Dancing would get corrected to Paul Cauthen and maybe that’s why Spotify mixes them up? But I’m just guessing? That type of thing used to happen all the time on the old virus-sharing sites back in the day.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:25 am
Could be Charley Crooked is just rightfully getting his seat at the front of the bus.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:28 am
Our entire Internet presence has become so intertwined that sometimes I feel like I’m being stalked. If I search for something on Google, I start getting ads for whatever it is on Facebook. I wouldn’t doubt that our past choices in one area affect the results we get on the others. I’ve had days when I felt like my favorite artists were stalking me because their pages pop up first when I open Instagram.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:37 am
I swear sometimes the phone is listening as well. Ads pop up for things discussed, but never searched for. Do I sound like a conspiracy nut?
April 8, 2026 @ 10:19 am
You are being stalked, Linda. It’s no coincidence that when you do a search on Google (I stay for away from places like Google and use SwissCows), do a bit of research on this, obviously not using Google or any of the other big search engines, and you will be surprised by what you find.
MikeB, our phones do track us, and our conversations are not private.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:37 am
Labels have infinitely more power and connections to “game” the spotify algorithm than any independent artist. As much as spotify and streaming are beneficial to independent artists, you have to remember that spotify cut a deal with the majors during its initial inception.
Labels still largely dictate streaming success and payout to their artists. The much maligned $.003 rate per stream is also false for the labels- deals and algorithms will always favor the stakeholders (labels).
I’m not certain this is the case with Charley Crockett but he did sign with massive Island Records which is owned by the largest music conglomerate in the world (Universal). Much of the spotify algorithm is a mystery to most, and how labels are interconnected and influence streaming services is just as much. I wouldn’t be surprised if this is the result of Charley’s label influence.
April 8, 2026 @ 9:48 am
this is not happening on my spotify fwiw
April 8, 2026 @ 9:52 am
Charley will be pleased, Paul less so! Both good albums and both well worth a listen.
April 8, 2026 @ 10:21 am
When I search Paul Cauthen on Spotify, Paul Cauthen comes up. Weird.
Interestingly enough, when I search good music, nothing beyond the ’80s comes up. Okay, I made that last part up. 😂
April 8, 2026 @ 10:56 am
After posting this article, some have been able to re-create it, others have not. I don’t have an answer as to why this is because I don’t know why it’s happening. I first noticed it on Friday, and that’s when I took the first screenshots. But I wanted to focus on the albums themselves first before talking about this particular issue, so it’s just today I am getting it up. I will say though, I was able to re-create the issue yesterday, and today I still see Charley Crockett’s “Age of the Ram” 3rd in searches on Spotify for Paul Cauthen, both on mobile and desktop.
Obviously, I tried different browsers, devices, deleted cache and cookies, used incognito mode, etc., and asked two other people to try and re-create the issue before deciding it was newsworthy. I do think over time the issue has diminished. But I also think it’s an issue that could be happening all across the Spotify platform to various artists.
It’s one thing to recommend certain artists over others. It’s an entirely other thing to offer search results for a completely different artist than the one you’re searching for. I wanted to flag and chronicle my experience just in case it comes up in the future.
April 8, 2026 @ 10:25 am
I ditched Spotify a couple years ago for Apple Music. A search there for Paul Cauthen did not show Charley at all.
April 8, 2026 @ 11:26 am
When I searched Paul Cauthen on my Spotify, Age of the Ram was the fifth suggestion after the Room 41 album, Book of Paul album, Cocaine Country Dancing and My Gospel album, then the rest of the Paul Cauthen catalog… so this is definitely not an isolated incident… Spotify is doing something funny with their algorithm.
I listen to Texas country mostly, but rarely Paul Cauthen or Charley Crockett besides what comes up on playlists I follow.