D4vd Collaborations with Laufey, Damiano David, Kali Uchis & Others Removed from Streaming Services Amid Controversy and Arrest

0 comments

D4vd Collaborations Removed From Streaming Services Amid Murder Charges

Several high-profile collaborations by singer D4vd have been pulled from major streaming platforms following his arrest on first-degree murder charges. Artists including Laufey, Damiano David, Kali Uchis, Holly Humberstone and Bryant Barnes have had their joint tracks with D4vd removed from services like Spotify and Apple Music.

The removals approach after the body of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas was discovered in the trunk of a Tesla registered to D4vd in September 2024. D4vd was subsequently arrested and charged with her murder. In response, collaborators began distancing themselves from the artist, with some requesting their joint works be taken down.

Which D4vd Collaborations Were Removed?

According to verified reports, the following collaborations have been scrubbed from streaming platforms:

Which D4vd Collaborations Were Removed?
Kali Uchis Damiano David Laufey
  • Laufey – “This Is How It Feels” (from D4vd’s EP Petals to Thorns)
  • Damiano David – “Tangerine” (replaced with a solo version by David)
  • Kali Uchis – “Crashing”
  • Holly Humberstone – “Superbloodmoon”
  • Bryant Barnes – “I’d Rather Pretend”

Kali Uchis publicly confirmed in September 2024 that she and her team were working to remove “Crashing” after learning of Rivas’ death. Similarly, figure skater Alysa Liu removed the Laufey/D4vd collaboration “This Is How It Feels” from her short-form routine around the same time.

Label and Soundtrack Repercussions

Beyond streaming removals, D4vd has faced broader industry consequences. His song “What Are You Waiting For” was reportedly deleted from the Madden 26 soundtrack. Darkroom/Interscope, his record label, dropped him last year amid the ongoing legal proceedings.

Label and Soundtrack Repercussions
Rivas Celeste Rivas

About the Case

The case centers on the death of Celeste Rivas, whose body was found in September 2024. D4vd remains in custody on first-degree murder charges. Whereas the exact timing of each song’s removal varies, the actions by collaborators and platforms followed public disclosure of the investigation.

As of April 2026, the tracks remain unavailable on major streaming services, and no official statements have indicated plans for reinstatement.

Related Posts

Leave a Comment