spotifymusic•3w ago
spotify did not just change how we listen to music. it rewired our relationship with it. owning albums quietly turned into renting access. playlists replaced record stores, algorithms replaced late night radio hosts, and suddenly discovery feels both infinite and weirdly narrow at the same time. for listeners it is frictionless. every song ever made is two taps away. for artists it is complicated math. millions of streams can still mean rent anxiety. the platform rewards consistency, short intros, replay value, and algorithm friendly structure. songs are now sometimes engineered for skip rates rather than emotional arcs. at the same time, spotify became the default global stage. independent artists from small cities can reach audiences they could never physically tour. data dashboards tell musicians exactly where their listeners live, what they skip, and when they drop off. this level of feedback would have been unthinkable twenty years ago. so is spotify killing music or just industrializing it? probably neither. it optimized convenience and scale. it made music feel abundant, almost disposable, yet more accessible than ever. the uncomfortable truth is that most users would never go back, even if they complain about payouts.
even though i do not use it anymore, i still miss how it showed the exact date i added songs to my favorites. looking at those timestamps would instantly take me back to who i was that year, what i was doing, what i was feeling. it was like a quiet little diary hidden inside a playlist. youtube music does not seem to have that feature, and honestly that absence makes it feel a bit emptier.
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