Why are there Two Nectars by Joji on Spotify?

Mark

New member
I was searching Joji’s album and noticed duplicates. Why are there two Nectars by Joji on Spotify showing up on my app?
 
There are two versions of “Nectars” by Joji on Spotify because one is likely a single release and the other part of an album or deluxe edition.
 
"Nectar" is available on Spotify in two versions: a standard edition and a deluxe/expanded version. Although the main album is identical, Spotify lists the deluxe version separately because it contains a few extra tracks and alternate versions. Popular albums frequently do this to provide listeners with additional choices.
 
This is probably because of multiple versions/releases (clean/explicit or regional/Spotify glitch) that are reported as independent entities on Spotify, and is not a purposeful duplicate album. On occasion, streaming sites will have two records of the same album.
 
Joji released two different "Nectar" versions on Spotify because one was the regular edition and the other, the deluxe, contained some extra tracks, and sometimes the songs were reordered. Spotify separates these differently, so both show up as separate albums even though the main content is largely the same.
 
Due to the distribution and licensing of music, there are two instances where Joji lists Nectar on Spotify. Several entries can be created due to different versions (such as clean versus explicit) of the same album, or the same album released regionally, or the ownership of the rights being different, or the uploading of the album by a different distributor. Metadata or platform catalogue idiosyncrasy may also make duplicates emerge.
 
Two versions of Nectar by Joji on Spotify are most often as a result of licensing, distribution, or metadata variations, e.g. regional rights, different versions being uploaded with slightly different details, or older and newer versions existing in the same place on Spotify.
 
Nectars by Joji exists in two versions on Spotify since one of them is the original appearance and the other can be a deluxe or remastered version or an edition that is region-specific. This allows fans to have access to various track listings or better audio.
 
Most likely one is the original album and the other is a version that includes bonus tracks or alternate versions. Spotify sometimes splits releases if there’s a special edition or regional variation.
 
There are two Nectar albums on Spotify due to regional licensing or distribution differences. The music is the same—Spotify just shows duplicate listings because of backend/label metadata, not because Joji released two different versions.
 
There are two versions of Nectar by Joji on Spotify because one is the standard release and the other is a deluxe or reissued version. The extra version usually includes bonus tracks, alternate mixes, or updated artwork, which is why Spotify lists them separately.
 
Totally normal, Spotify sometimes shows two Nectars because one might be the explicit vs clean version, or a regional/label re-upload, same album, different metadata, so it looks like a duplicate.
 
It’s usually due to licensing/distribution issues or metadata duplicates on Spotify, different uploads or versions (e.g., region-specific, older removed vs new upload) can make the same Nectar album appear twice in search.
 
Spotify shows two versions of Joji’s Nectar because one is the standard edition and the other is a deluxe or reissued version. They may differ in tracklists, release dates, or bonus songs, so Spotify lists them separately.
 
The original album, and the other is possibly a deluxe album, or possibly a regional album, and this may lead to duplicating the album on Spotify, in case of license issues, or because of its bonus tracks.
 
There are two versions of Nectars by Joji on Spotify because one may be a deluxe or alternate edition, a re-release, or a region-specific version. Artists and labels often upload multiple editions to offer bonus tracks, remixes, or updated metadata, giving listeners more options to enjoy the music.
 
On Spotify, you might see two versions of Nectar by Joji because of how music rights and distribution work. Often duplicate listings happen due to different licensing/distribution deals, regional releases, or metadata issues that lead to Spotify showing multiple entries for essentially the same album.
These can appear as separate albums if labels or distributors uploaded them separately for different regions or if there are slight differences in release details. Sometimes platform errors or duplicate uploads also cause this.
 
Two of the listings of the song may appear on Spotify due to licensing and distribution factors - the allocation of rights in different regions, various distributors, or varying versions (explicit/clean, remastered, metadata differences) of the song resulting in two seemingly identical entries.
 
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