Janelle Monáe’s new album Dirty Computer was accompanied by a film of the same name. It’s the story of a dystopian society where non-conforming androids (“dirty computers”) are reprogrammed (“cleaned”). As a promotional tool for the new album and film, Monáe has launched a new application that “cleans” one of your Spotify playlists. It asks you to select a Spotify playlist, then generates a new playlist with that same name which seemingly deletes every song and replaces them with her new album. “Feel what it’s like to be cleaned, and update your playlists with me,” she wrote in a tweet. The original playlist remains intact, but gets a renamed title like “Jane 53856 Dirty Playlist.” Give it a try. (It works.)

UPDATE (May 16, 8:41 p.m. Eastern): It appears that the application is no longer available. Monáe has since deleted the tweet advertising it, and the links she previously shared redirect to her website’s homepage. Pitchfork has reached out to Monáe’s representatives for more information.

Correction: A previous version of this story indicated that the app deleted the songs from your playlists. It actually renames your original playlists, makes a new playlist with your original playlist’s name, and renames your old playlist. You don’t actually lose your playlists.