What is happening to D4vd now does not look like the usual public unraveling of a rising artist. There was no dramatic label statement, no cleanly announced separation, no single moment where the industry appeared to slam the door in public. Instead, the collapse seems to have happened in pieces, quietly at first and then all at once. As outrage around the murder case against the singer keeps spreading, the business around him appears to have been stripped away step by step, until what once looked like momentum now looks more like a slow-motion industry retreat.

D4vd Celeste Rivas Hernandez murder case updates: 'Significant amount' of child pornography found on phone belonging to singer - ABC7 Los Angeles

According to reporting tied to the Yahoo article, Interscope Records quietly dropped D4vd late last year, long before this latest wave of attention fully exploded. That detail alone changes the mood around the story. It suggests the distancing did not begin only after this week’s headlines intensified, but had already been happening in the background. Billboard also reported earlier this month that D4vd was no longer on the rosters of some key former business partners, including Sony Music Publishing and The Team, pointing to a much broader industry separation than just one label relationship cooling off.

The music itself is now being peeled away too.

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Several collaborations involving D4vd have reportedly been removed from streaming platforms, with Universal Music Group helping some of its artists take that step. Public reporting says songs involving Kali Uchis, Laufey, Holly Humberstone, and Damiano David have been pulled or altered, with Damiano even replacing a D4vd-assisted version of “Tangerine” with a solo version. What makes that especially striking is how coordinated the retreat now feels. This is no longer one collaborator trying to create distance. It looks more like a widening industry effort to erase association wherever possible.

Singer D4vd reportedly identified as suspect in death of teen found in Tesla | Los Angeles | The Guardian

That backlash is not limited to collaborators or executives. Pressure is now building from outside the industry as well, with advocacy groups and petition campaigns pushing streaming platforms to remove D4vd’s music entirely. One Change.org petition calling for that kind of full removal appeared this week, while Industry Blackout has publicly demanded that streaming services stop carrying his catalog. The argument behind that pressure is clear: for many critics, allowing the music to remain widely available now feels morally intolerable given the severity of the accusations surrounding him.

The reason the pressure has become so fierce is the scale of the criminal case now attached to his name.

D4vd charged with first-degree murder over death of teenage girl - BBC News

D4vd, whose legal name is David Burke, has been charged in Los Angeles with first-degree murder and other offenses in connection with the death of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez. Prosecutors allege he killed her to stop her from exposing a sexual relationship that allegedly began when she was 13. Authorities say her dismembered body was found in Burke’s abandoned Tesla in September 2025, months after she disappeared. He has pleaded not guilty, and his legal team has maintained his innocence, but the allegations alone have already detonated his public image and triggered a wave of recoil across the business around him.

That is what makes the silence around some of these industry moves feel so chilling. The collapse is not theatrical. It is procedural. One roster at a time, one collaboration at a time, one business tie at a time, the structure that once held up D4vd’s career appears to be disappearing. There is something especially grim about that kind of downfall, because it suggests the machine that once helped create a star can also begin dismantling him without needing to say very much at all.

And the retreat is reaching beyond just record-company relationships.

Earlier reporting had already shown major fallout spreading into other corners of entertainment, including festival bookings, tour dates, and even soundtrack placements. His remaining tour dates were canceled last year, and AP has reported he had already been dropped by his label amid the mounting scrutiny. Other outlets and reference reporting also indicate he was removed from festival lineups and lost additional industry partnerships as the case gathered force. Taken together, it paints the picture of an artist whose ecosystem did not merely weaken. It has been hollowed out.

What makes this story even harsher is how quickly the public conversation has shifted from shock to rejection. At first, the reaction centered on the horror of the allegations. Now it is also about whether the music business should have continued carrying him as long as it did, whether the quiet nature of the label split says something about how the industry protects itself, and whether streaming platforms should still profit from his catalog while the case moves through court. Those questions are now hanging over every remaining piece of his career.

So while the article’s headline emphasizes that D4vd was “quietly” dropped, the real story no longer feels quiet at all. The silence may have been in how the breakups were handled, but the consequences are loud now. The label is gone. Major collaborators are pulling away. Songs are disappearing from streaming platforms. Advocacy groups are demanding a full purge. And the criminal case at the center of it all has become too severe for the industry to pretend this is just another damaged star waiting out bad press. What is unfolding now looks much darker: not a pause, not a scandal cycle, but the public stripping away of a career that once moved fast and now seems to be collapsing even faster.