
In 2020, Spotify Wrapped was written about 1.4k times and garnered over 85k engagements. Spotify Wrapped is always published during the first week of December, so we compared the public interest levels of the first 48 hours after it was released for 20. Public interest to Spotify Wrapped was higher in 2021 than in 2020 It’s because of this personalization that makes content about it so buzzworthy online.įor this reason, we explored the Spotify Wrapped content in 2021 to see how engagement compared to 2020, and highlighted the entertaining memes that flooded social media platforms. Wrapped is more than just a curated yearly playlist - it’s a personalized report that looks into the depth of each user’s listening habits. While other audio platforms such as Apple Music try to compete, even with all its resources, Spotify remains the King. This eye-popping moment shows how the Wrapped feature has become even more successful, but it’s additionally notable because we’ve seen less engagement to most events overall in 2021. In 2021, public interest in Spotify Wrapped more than doubled compared to 2020, which was otherwise a record year. What’s different this year? How much we cared. Pop Smoke - Shoot For the Stars Aim For The MoonĤ.For the sixth year in a row, Spotify Wrapped has revealed the top artists, songs, genres, albums, and podcasts that millions of users around the world were discovering and celebrating. Imanbek, SAINt JHN - ‘Roses’ (Imanbek Remix)Ĥ. Dua Lipa - ‘Don’t Start Now’ Spotify 2020 Wrapped AustraliaĢ. Imanbek and SAINt JHN - ‘Roses’ (Imanbek Remix)ĥ. Here's hoping all these artists got paid more than $30 for their ridiculous amount of streams.Īnyway, you can take a dive into your own personal Spotify Wrapped 2020 by logging in here (seems to only be working on mobile at the moment, but stay tuned), and find the deets of the world's greater listening habits underneath:Ĥ. In Australia, the artists are Juice WRLD, Drake, Taylor Swift, Eminem and The Weeknd, with Blinding Lights, Roses and Don't Start Now making the song list, alongside DaBaby's Rockstar and Harry Styles' Watermelon Sugar. Bad Bunny, Drake, J Balvin, JuiceWRLD and The Weeknd are the world's most-streamed artists, while The Weeknd's Blinding Lights, Tones and I's Dance Monkey (!), Roddy Ricch's The Box, Imanbek's Roses remix and Dua Lipa's Don't Start Now are the most-listened songs. There's also the announcement of the listening habits of Australia and the greater world too. There's also a similar platform for podcasts too, descending into which podcasts you listened to the most, and - in-line with Spotify's drive to give you a mix-match of both their music and podcast-hosting sides - there's also a playlist that gives you a bit of both, mixing together your most-listened artists alongside some podcast episodes Spotify believe you may be interested in. It's the usual deal this year, highlighting how many artists you discovered, how many genres you listened to and which ones were listened to the most (yes, like Australiana indie and Escape Room, which we're still figuring out), which song was your most-listened (as well as which day you listened to it first, and most), your top five most-listened songs (and more, in playlist form), which song you listened to before anyone else, the nostalgia of what non-2020s decade you streamed the most, artist of the year, and yeah - you know the rest. Instead, it's the day Spotify Wrapped goes live for 2020, meaning you can relive your trauma of the year and the music that helped you through it (or the music that was there for you as you wallowed in the confusion and strangeness of the year that, as Spotify say, may be the longest one ever).



No, not the Coachella nor Splendour In The Grass lineup announcement day, nor the day Spacey Jane released Sunlight. It's the most fantastic day of the year for music fans.
