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'Tis the season for revisiting everything that you listened to over the course of the year. Spotify Wrapped — the annual recap of your favorite songs, artists, and albums that you listened to on Spotify — is finally available from the popular streaming service. This year, it comes with some added insight: your favorite music of the decade. Remember when you went through that weird ska phase in 2011? Spotify does, and it's letting you revisit it before you head into the 2020s. Here's how to access your Spotify Wrapped to see what you've been listening to in 2019 and throughout the 2010s — and why it might not be as accurate as Spotify claims.
How to access Spotify Wrapped
You can take a look at your Spotify Wrapped for 2019 by going to the Spotify Wrapped website and logging in with your Spotify account. You can also find it through the Spotify app. There should be a banner as soon as you open the app encouraging you to look at your 2019 Wrapped, but if it doesn't come up for whatever reason, tap the Search button on the bottom menu and type in 'Wrapped 2019' or 'Your Top Songs 2019.' Either should produce a playlist with the title 'Your Top Songs 2019' with bright pink album art.
What you'll see in Spotify Wrapped
On desktop, you'll get a slideshow-style presentation for Spotify Wrapped that you can click through at your own pace. On mobile, the review of your year in music and podcasts comes in an Instagram story-style format. You'll get the same information on both, though.
This year's Wrapped starts with a review of what you listened to throughout all four seasons of the year, highlight what was on repeat for you throughout the winter, spring, summer, and fall. Spotify then displays your top artist of the year, followed by the rest of your top five most listened to. The next section looks at where the artists you listen to are from, highlighting how many countries you heard from in 2019. Genre classifications come next, displaying what types of music got the most play for you over the course of the year. Spotify shows your top songs of 2019, which you can revisit at any point in the 'Your Top Songs 2019' playlist.
Once you've tapped through the music, Spotify will also recap your podcast listening habits by showing off the top five shows you spent the most time listening to. Another slide gives you exactly how many minutes of podcasts you listened to, as well as the categories you spent the most time listening to.
The list wraps up with details about your music discovery habits in 2019, telling you how many new artists you listened to and which one became your favorite of the bunch.
What about information from the decade?
Near the end of your personalized Spotify Wrapped, the service will show you how long you've been a premium subscriber. Seeing as Spotify has been around since 2008, it's possible that you've been listening for a whole decade or more. Spotify will then give you some information about your listening habits since you've paid for the service, including how many minutes of music you have listened to each year. (Users who aren't premium subscribers will receive a considerably more limited version of Wrapped data.)
Spotify then lays out the top songs that you listened to each year, dating back to when you started listening to music on Spotify. Finally, the service will show you your artist of the decade, the person that you listened to the most and kept returning to no matter the year.
Why your Spotify Wrapped might seem wrong
Do you feel like the list of artists and songs Spotify put together for you is somehow off? You aren't alone. People have been using social media to complain about Spotify's annual recap, claiming that the streaming service hasn't been tracking their listening habits or just plain got it wrong.
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Similar complaints have surfaced on forums like Reddit, where some users have claimed to use music tracking service Last.fm to keep tabs on what they listened to over the course of the year. There are claims that Last.fm and Spotify provide different results, even though all of the music that the users are listening to is being played on Spotify, and users are claiming that Last.fm's tracking is more accurate.
Mic reached out to Spotify for more information about why people may be experiencing these supposedly inaccurate Wrapped playlists, but there are a few viable theories floating about that could explain the issue. There seems to be anecdotal evidence among users who listen to a lot of music offline that saved tracks are not included in Spotify Wrapped — the annual recap only accounts for music that was streamed. However, Spotify does at least claim to keep track of offline listening data. According to a community help forum, Spotify records offline plays and puts it toward your listening stats the next time that you are connected to the internet. It's possible that some people are missing data if they have not opened Spotify while connected to the internet recently and do a significant amount of listening offline, but for most users this shouldn't be a significant contributing factor in determining your Wrapped data.
This isn't the first year that Spotify has gotten some push back from users who believe that their playlists are inaccurate, and there may be some insight in the misgivings of previous years that explain issues with the latest edition of Wrapped. For instance, in 2018, users noted that their year-end playlists felt off. Then it was revealed that Spotify Wrapped only collects data from January 1 to October 31, leaving out the entirety of November and December. The result is a good chunk of your listening habits being chopped off before the list is made, including the stuff that you are most into at the time that list comes out. Recency bias likely makes the list feel more wrong than it is, as the artists you're spending the most time with in the moment may not occupy a top spot on the playlist. This slightly limited listening window appears to be active again for Wrapped 2019. According to a Spotify press release, Wrapped is available for listens logged before October 31.
Unfortunately, other explanations are few and far between as to why Spotify's tracking data may seem so off for some people, and there is no telling exactly how widespread the issue may be — though it seems like a minority of users are experiencing discrepancies that are big enough to complain about. Spotify is a bit of a black box to those on the outside, so it's hard to say what is going on when the app is tracking your listening data. One user reported reaching out to Spotify to ask about the inaccuracies and received a response that said, 'This can happen for a number of reasons, but we’ll pass your feedback on for future campaigns.'
That's not particularly insightful, obviously, but it's at least an acknowledgment that things can (and apparently do) go wrong from time to time when tracking user listening data. Perhaps it's at least comforting to know that you aren't alone in experiencing these issues, and it's reassuring to know that it's not just that something feels off with your playlist — it really could be wrong. But certainly it would be better if Spotify just got it right in the first place.
Back to TopNewsThere’s an easy way to see your most played artists on Spotify!
Spotify makes life pretty easy in terms of tracking your plays and building seemingly hand crafted playlists such as Discover Weekly (mine is pure heat btw). But there is actually a way to identify exactly which artists you’ve been cramming the most, and it is sure to raise a few eye brows.
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