Tag: 2021wrapped

2021 Wrapped for Podcasters Shows That More People Are Becoming Audio Creators

2020 was an explosive year for new podcast creation—but 2021 proved to be the year podcasting really hit its stride. New creation hasn’t slowed down one bit, and more than ever, podcasters are getting more creative with their content development and business models. With 1.2 million new podcasts published on Spotify this past year, it’s clear that an increasing number of people are listening to and creating audio. 

This year, we delivered Wrapped for Podcasters to more creators than ever, demonstrating that the creator economy is growing—and rapidly. 

We believe that a huge driver of this growth is accessibility to innovative creation tools. Of the aforementioned 1.2 million new podcasts published on Spotify in 2021, more than 1 million of them were created using Anchor, our all-in-one podcasting platform. Anchor now powers around 75% of all podcasts on Spotify—the vast majority of which are from independent creators—so its user behavior offers a great peek into what’s happening in the world of those up-and-coming podcasters.

Anchor offers more to creators than your basic record-and-upload. In 2021, we began offering a variety of features in Anchor that enable podcasters to create, grow, and monetize their content in ways that had never been possible before. This includes:

We believe innovating on the creation experience has a profound impact on the growth of the overall podcasting creator economy. And when we took a look into the data from 2021, the numbers proved that to be the case.

  • Anchor continues to drive 80% of the new podcasts being published to Spotify every year.
  • These independent shows collectively are driving incredible engagement: In recent months, more than 40% of monthly podcast listeners on Spotify have listened to at least one show created using Anchor.
  • More than 13,000 Anchor-powered shows charted in 2021, making up 35% of the shows on Spotify’s charts this year. 
  • As a result of rolling out these new formats that can’t be experienced anywhere else, the consumption of Anchor-powered shows globally leans toward Spotify, with around 65% of their consumption happening on Spotify.
  • The market for independent podcasters is truly global: The top markets, in terms of total new shows created on Anchor in 2021, were the U.S., Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, and India.
  • Central and South America in particular are on the come-up for a thriving creator economy in podcasts: Anchor’s fastest-growing markets in 2021, measured by average monthly increase in new shows, were Peru, Colombia, Argentina, Mexico, and Chile.

We’re excited to see continued progress in the podcast space as creators grow and hit their strides. Stay tuned for more to come in 2022!

Spotify Celebrates Wrapped With A Totally Normal Party for 2021

Photo credits: Getty images

On December 1 we unveiled 2021 Spotify Wrapped, enabling our listeners to reflect—and rejoice—as they got to witness and share what they listened to this year. As this was a year unlike any before, 2021 Wrapped was too. So even after the in-app experience debuted and the top artists and podcasters of the year were revealed, we couldn’t let the Wrapped energy stop there. We wanted to continue to celebrate and connect fans and artists to each other. 

So last night in LA, we brought the Wrapped campaign experience to life in a way only Spotify can with A Totally Normal Party for 2021. The event featured themed audio activations, aura readings from Mystic Michaela, groove-garnering DJs, and a performance from the one and only Gwen Stefani

Musical moments

We kicked off the night with a DJ set from Lost Kings. The LA-based duo, Robert Abisi and Nick Shanholtz, gained momentum online with their catchy remixes of pop hits and are now spinning beats of their own as well.

Afterward, because no Spotify event would be complete without a surprise, the local USC Trojan Marching Band erupted through the curtains in full uniform. They played an instrumental medley of the five most streamed songs on Spotify in 2021: Olivia Rodrigo’s “drivers license,” Lil Nas X’s “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name),” The Kid LAROI’s “STAY (with Justin Bieber),” Olivia Rodrigo’s “good 4 u,” and Dua Lipa’s “Levitating”).

What the World Streamed Most in 2021

If 2020 was the year that flipped the world on its head, 2021 was the year that we got used to seeing things upside down. With “normal” thrown out the window, people around the world started to embrace the unknown—and in doing so, championed all of the things that make each of us unique. 

Spotify’s 2021 Wrapped celebrates this idea—the millions of weird and wonderful ways to listen and live in a world that continues to keep us on our toes. Today, we unveil the top artists, albums, songs, podcasts, and more that defined how more than 381 million people around the world listened and discovered audio during a year that turned “unprecedented” into, well, precedented.  

As usual, Wrapped helps us reflect on the large role audio played in the lives of our listeners—and how our favorite creators soundtracked the world around us. 

The top artists, songs, and albums globally

For the second year in a row, Puerto Rican Reggaeton star Bad Bunny takes the title of most-streamed artist in the world on Spotify. And what’s more: He’s received over 9.1 billion streams without releasing a new album this year. He is swiftly followed by singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, whose Red (Taylor’s Version) gave old and new fans alike a reason to relive the artist’s early groundbreaking work. Rounding up 2021’s top three is BTS. The globally beloved k-pop group had a standout year thanks to their single “Butter.” Canadian hip-hop artists Drake—who released Certified Lover Boy in September—and Justin Bieber—whose 2021 album Justice featured collaborations with artists from across the globe—take spots four and five, respectively.

The top song of 2021 globally is Olivia Rodrigo’s runaway “drivers license,” which garnered over 1.1 billion streams. Lil Nas X’s viral “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)” dances its way to second place and heralded the artist’s first studio album. The Kid LAROI enters the ranks for the first time, with his Justin Bieber collaboration “STAY” taking third. The fourth spot sees Olivia Rodrigo once again, this time with “good 4 u,” which also earned the title of 2021 Spotify Song of the Summer. The fifth most streamed song to rise in the ranks is Dua Lipa’s Levitating (feat. DaBaby).” 

When it comes to top albums of 2021 globally, Olivia Rodrigo once again claims the crown—her debut album SOUR clearly held a bit of sweetness. Dua Lipa’s Future Nostalgia ranks second, with Justin Bieber’s Justice, Ed Sheeran’s =, and Doja Cat’s Planet Her coming in third, fourth, and fifth. 

The top podcasts globally

Coming out of its first full year as a Spotify exclusive, The Joe Rogan Experience remains the number-one podcast on Spotify globally. It is followed by the fearless Alex Cooper’s Call Her Daddy, which also became exclusive to Spotify in 2021. True crime and news continue to be popular genres within the medium, with Crime Junkie, TED Talks Daily, and The Daily rounding out the list. 

Notable trends of 2021

When we looked at trends on Spotify in 2021, the top songs, artists, albums, and podcasts weren’t the only things we found. We learned about the moments that united listeners—and the ones that were notable for their uniqueness. 

Nostalgia played a role in people’s listening in 2021 as fans rediscovered old favorites—and new generations adopted them as well. Let’s face it: There are certain songs and albums that just sound like home (in a good way).

The Wait Is Over. Your Spotify 2021 Wrapped Is Here.

What did your 2021 sound like? Did you fall back in love with a past favorite artist, sample a genre you’d never listened to before, or binge true crime podcasts for the first time ever? However you streamed, it was uniquely you, and uniquely 2021. 

Today, in addition to revealing the top music and podcasts streamed globally in 2021, we’re unveiling our annual 2021 personalized Wrapped experience for listeners. It’s inspired by the millions of weird and wonderful ways you listened this year—and by the creators who soundtracked the world around us. 

In a world that continues to keep us on our toes, the 2021 Wrapped experience is full of the known and unknown, with fan-favorite experiences mixing with surprising new ones that connect listeners with each other and their favorite creators. 

Lo que Más Escuchó el Mundo en 2021

Si el 2020 fue el año que puso al mundo de cabeza, el 2021 fue el año en que nos acostumbramos a ver las cosas al revés. Con la noción de lo “normal” arrojada por la ventana, la gente en todo el mundo comenzó a abrazar lo desconocido y, al hacerlo, defendió todas esas cosas que nos hacen únicos a cada uno de nosotros.

La campaña Mi 2021 En Spotify celebra esta idea: las millones de formas extrañas y maravillosas de escuchar y vivir en un mundo que continúa manteniéndonos alerta. Hoy presentamos los mejores artistas, álbumes, canciones, podcasts y más que definieron cómo más de 381 millones de personas en todo el mundo escucharon y descubrieron el audio durante un año que convirtió la expresión “sin precedentes” en, digamos, un precedente.

Como de costumbre, #Mi2021EnSpotify ​nos ayuda a reflexionar sobre el gran papel que desempeña el audio en la vida de nuestros oyentes y cómo nuestros creadores favoritos nos regalaron una banda sonora para el mundo que nos rodea.

Los artistas, canciones y álbumes más escuchados a nivel mundial

Por segundo año consecutivo, la estrella puertorriqueña de reguetón Bad Bunny se lleva el título de artista con más streams del mundo en Spotify. Aún más: ha recibido más de 9.100 millones de streams sin lanzar un nuevo álbum este año. Le sigue de cerca la cantautora Taylor Swift, cuyo álbum Red (versión de Taylor) les dio a los viejos y nuevos fans una razón para revivir la revolucionaria obra temprana de la artista. Redondeando el top 3 de 2021 está BTS. El grupo de k-pop más amado a nivel mundial tuvo un año destacado gracias a su sencillo “Butter”. Los artistas canadienses de hip-hop Drake, que lanzó Certified Lover Boy en septiembre, y Justin Bieber, cuyo álbum de 2021 Justice contó con colaboraciones con artistas de todo el mundo, ocupan los puestos cuatro y cinco, respectivamente.

La canción más escuchada en 2021 a nivel mundial es la sorpresiva “drivers license” de Olivia Rodrigo, que obtuvo más de 1.100 millones de streams. El track viral “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)” de Lil Nas X llega hasta el segundo lugar y anunció el primer álbum de estudio del artista. Kid LAROI entra en las filas por primera vez, con su colaboración junto a Justin Bieber “STAY” ocupando el tercer lugar. El cuarto lugar muestra de nuevo a Olivia Rodrigo, esta vez con “good 4 u”, que también se ganó el título de Canción del Verano de Spotify 2021. La quinta canción más escuchada en escalar los charts es “Levitating (con DaBaby)” de Dua Lipa.

Cuando se trata de los álbumes más escuchados de 2021 a nivel mundial, Olivia Rodrigo vuelve a reclamar la corona: su álbum debut SOUR claramente tenía un poco de dulzura. Future Nostalgia de Dua Lipa ocupa el segundo lugar, con Justice de Justin Bieber, = de Ed Sheeran y Planet Her de Doja Cat en tercer, cuarto y quinto lugar.

Los podcasts más escuchados a nivel mundial

Saliendo de su primer año completo como exclusivo de Spotify, The Joe Rogan Experience sigue siendo el podcast número uno en Spotify a nivel mundial. Le sigue Call Her Daddy, de la intrépida Alex Cooper, que también se convirtió en exclusivo de Spotify en 2021. Los crímenes reales y las noticias siguen siendo géneros populares dentro del medio, con Crime Junkie, TED Talks Daily y The Daily completando la lista.

Además de la música y los podcasts más escuchados del mundo, no olvides revisar tu propia experiencia personal Tu Resumen 2021 en la app de Spotify para ver cómo lo que escuchaste cuenta la historia de tu año. Obtén más información sobre lo que encontrarás en tu espacio Tu Resumen 2021 personal en la app de Spotify.

La espera ha terminado: aquí están las listas completas de las canciones, los artistas, álbumes y podcasts que definieron al 2021.

Artistas más escuchados globalmente 

  1. Bad Bunny
  2. Taylor Swift
  3. BTS
  4. Drake
  5. Justin Bieber

Álbumes más escuchados globalmente 

  1. SOUR de Olivia Rodrigo
  2. Future Nostalgia de Dua Lipa
  3. Justice de Justin Bieber
  4. = de Ed Sheeran
  5. Planet Her de Doja Cat

Canciones más escuchadas globalmente 

  1. “drivers license” de Olivia Rodrigo
  2. “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name) de Lil Nas X
  3. “STAY (with Justin Bieber)” de The Kid LAROI
  4. “good 4 u” de Olivia Rodrigo
  5. “Levitating (feat. DaBaby)” de Dua Lipa

Podcasts más populares globalmente 

  1. The Joe Rogan Experience
  2. Call Her Daddy
  3. Crime Junkie
  4. TED Talks Daily
  5. The Daily

Global Head of Brand Design Rasmus Wangelin Explains the Creative Behind Spotify 2021 Wrapped

Spotify Wrapped: You eagerly anticipate its arrival. You swoon over the in-app experience. You share your results on your socials. You snicker when you see the ads during your commute. But do you know what goes into Wrapped’s unique visual identity each year?

Many months ahead of Wrapped’s December launch, Spotify’s Brand & Creative team comes together to refresh Wrapped as a true campaign and experience that reflects on the year with its own unique look and feel. To get the scoop, For the Record spoke with Spotify’s Global Head of Brand Design Rasmus Wangelin. He shared the considerations he and his team put into Wrapped year after year—and what’s special about the creative for 2021.  

What is your role within the Spotify Brand & Creative team? How does your work throughout the year transition into Wrapped?

In collaboration with my team, I oversee Spotify’s design work for brand and marketing globally. I run a team of between 15 and 20 designers, art directors, and design directors working alongside me across different initiatives. They can range from brand marketing, music and podcast marketing, art direction and branding, design thought leadership, and problem solving any design-related issues for the company as a whole. We really work and collaborate with almost all parts of Spotify. We’re also always proactively working in the background on the brand itself—the rules around it, guidelines, how it comes to life.

Wrapped is probably the biggest project we do every year. And it’s not like other projects end—but because we know Wrapped is coming, we have to orchestrate and organize our team to be able to support it properly, alongside everything else that we still have going on. 

And funny enough, design explorations for Wrapped actually start in June every year. We have to start that early in order to land the design direction so that we can then build an extensive tool kit that will be used by all of our partners and agencies globally.

What are some of the considerations that go into the Wrapped visual identity each year? 

I think there are a few different answers here. I think the most important one is that the way we tell the story of music and audio culture every year shifts, right? So we actually want to look at the year that has been and align our way of talking and our ideas with the year. As you can see, every year has a slightly different theme. And it’s important for us on the design front to make sure that whatever design we create matches the sentiment of the way we’re talking about the year conceptually. 

And then outside of that, we actually aspire to create a completely new and fresh articulation of our brand every year. That is Spotify. We’re always inventing, trying things, and exploring how we can push the brand. So when you go through the years and you start backtracking on Twitter and Instagram and all these different places that you can post, you can almost visually see what year you’re talking about based on the art direction.

Of course we’re always thinking about all the obvious things like accessibility and creating a design that feels inclusive enough for everyone to understand it. We work closely with a lot of different teams at Spotify, and we bring them in as stakeholders to make sure that we get feedback from different places with different expertise really early in the process. We’re a digital-first company, so we are always thinking about how we can create impactful work across all of our digital touchpoints. So, for example, motion is always a key part of our design. 

What are some of the specific elements within the identity for 2021 Wrapped? What should fans look forward to? 

The graphic element this year for Wrapped is a dynamic thread that ties together all the work. When we started looking at this as a design element, we were super excited because it gives us an additional layer of storytelling in every piece of creative. You can, let’s say, have an artist image with copy, but you can also have things inside of this ribbon to enhance the story and go deeper with an insight. 

Sometimes we will put words like “2021” or “Wrapped,” but it also gives us an opportunity to actually lean in even further and have a bit of a dialog with our audience. We’ve created a set of standard symbols, like a heart or a fire, but we’re also giving local markets an opportunity to create their own custom symbols. We had so much fun with this piece when creating the work and we love the idea that some symbols might only be fully understood by a true fan. We’re massive music fans ourselves. Everyone who works at Spotify is very in tune with music and music culture, and we want that passion to shine through. 

How does the 2021 Wrapped visual identity reflect 2021 as a whole?

This year, people around the world started to embrace the unknown in many ways, so we wanted every piece of creative to feel unique. At the same time, consistency is always important for a large campaign like Wrapped, and the playful ribbon does a good job at creating unique articulations while tying together the work as a whole.

 

This year, as you enjoy the new and familiar elements of the Wrapped in-app experience or explore what the world streamed most this year, make sure to take a look as well as a listen. 

DJ Moore Kismet Uses Spotify Artist Wrapped To Learn About Their Fans—and Themself

Wrapped isn’t just for fans—it’s for creators too. And today, Spotify for Artists launched its annual 2021 Artist Wrapped microsite, presenting artists with a custom experience and sharecard showcasing their success on Spotify over the past year. It’s a moment created specially for artists, who can also be delighted by a year’s worth of streaming data driven by their fans worldwide. 

On the microsite, artists can view their total hours streamed; increases in followers, total listeners, streams, or playlist adds; total numbers of top listeners and shares; and information showing the journey of an artist’s top track. This year, artists can also enjoy an Audio Aura that gives them their own aura based on elements of their artwork and sonics; a Throwback Track that showcases their top catalog track that is still streaming strong; and a list of all their collaborators.  

Since its inception in 2017, Artist Wrapped has become a moment that artists and fans alike look forward to all year. It has seen tremendous growth in the five years since its launch:

From year to year, Spotify’s Artist Wrapped has been an opportunity for creators to see how they’ve grown on the platform. One such artist is 16-year-old, LA-based DJ Omar Davis, who creates dreamy dance music under the alias of Moore Kismet. They grew up in a musical family and aspired to be in music or film since childhood. Then, in eighth grade, they created their first piece of music after being inspired by a YouTube video. 

“I came across the official audio video for ‘Hindsight’ by Audien,” Omar explained. “Listening to that song, I was blown away. It made me feel happy; it made me feel energetic. It made me feel safe and uplifted. It was a very eye-opening experience for me. And when I started delving deeper into that, I was like, ‘Hmm, maybe I should try doing this myself.’ So I just downloaded the trial version of FL Studio and I started playing around in it.”

In the nearly five years since, they’ve increased their production, invested in collaborations, and honed their sound. They ultimately posted a single to Spotify in 2018. Now, they have 300,000 plus monthly listeners and two songs with over a million streams. 

For the Record chatted with Moore about creating music during a pandemic, speaking to their audience, and what they look forward to in their 2021 Artist Wrapped. 

Tell us a little about your music. How would you describe your sound? 

If we’re going for a specific vibe, I’ve been using this phrase that a fan once called my music: beautifully controlled chaos. But to put more, genre-specific labels on it: I make experimental electronic pop that touches a little bit with dubstep, R&B, indie folk, soul music, stuff of that nature.

And that’s kind of always been my style. But I’d never truly known how to articulate it in music until the pandemic hit. So, a lot of the music that I’ve been writing more recently feels more like myself than anything I’ve ever written before. So I’m just very grateful for that.

Can you talk a little bit more about how the pandemic allowed you to to find this space for yourself and and claim your music?

When the shutdown first hit, I didn’t know what to do. But my coping mechanism for whenever sh*t hits the fan is always writing music. It creates a kind of catharsis for me. That energy allowed me to access parts of my creativity that I’ve literally never been able to touch before. During that time, I realized that when I was writing something, I could actually get out what I was thinking about in my head—and then make it even crazier. And I’m just like, “Whoa, wait. I’ve literally never been able to do that before. What just happened?” For me, this time has been my way of rediscovering what it truly is I want to create and what I want to put out to the world.

You’ve been on Spotify since about 2018. When did you start looking at your Artist Wrapped?

Right away. I first started because I saw everybody else posting theirs and I was like, “Damn, they have all of these insane streaming numbers! I wonder what mine is.” And then when I went to check, I only had like 3,000. Well that’s anticlimactic! It was kind of disappointing at first. But I’ve been checking every year ever since, especially once I started working on myself, working on my music, and working with Anthony, my manager.

I would honestly have to say that this year is the biggest year I’ve had and I’m really, really, really grateful for that because I was not expecting anything that I released this year to do well or to have as much of an impact on people. I hit my first two million streams this year. “Rumor” is on its way to hitting three million, which is f%#*ing crazy because it hit two million quicker than it hit one million. 

What type of information have you been able to take away from previous years of  Artist Wrapped and then utilize as you go into the next year of work?

Pre-saves, monthly listeners, streams, and followers. Those are the four most important things that I take into consideration every year when I look at my Wrapped. But also, growth is growth. It’s such a crazy feeling to see how far you’ve come since the last time you got one of these things rendered for you.

I also love seeing demographics—like the pie split up—of what specific demographics or gender identities are listening to my music. I’m noticing that the genderqueer categories are starting to grow exponentially, which makes me incredibly happy because I write my music for other queer people. I’ve always tried to do my best to make my Black ancestors and my trans ancestors proud, and it gets hard sometimes when I’m feeling down on myself and my body and my music, and my mind and my ability to do things. 

So I guess I really just try to make sure that people know that I’m doing this for me, and if you resonate with it, then more power to you. Because I wrote it from the perspective of millions of other queer people who feel the same way. So to see that transfer over into my music and how it performs on Spotify, it’s just incredible.

Why are you excited for 2021 Artist Wrapped? 

I’m really excited to see how much everything has changed since 2020. I really am. And you know, every year I check Wrapped because it’s a way to see how much progress you’ve made as an artist on a public platform that can literally make or break your career. 

I’d always been very cognizant of what I was trying to put out into the world up until quarantine. Quarantine was when I realized that I should stop giving a fu%k about other people’s expectations about who I am and what I write for myself and my own mental well-being. I’m just really excited to see how my sudden change of not caring about negligent people’s feelings has translated into the way that people listen to my music and how much people have listened to my music this year. 

It’s really great to get messages from listeners, fans, supporters, and everyone else in between telling me, “Your music has changed my life,” because getting into music and writing music in the first place has changed my life. 

What should the world look forward to from Moore Kismet in 2022?

2022 is the year of the f%#$ing Kismet. Next year, my debut album, Universe, is coming out, hopefully in summer. But of course, everything is still tentative. I’m hoping it can be out during Pride month. That is our goal. I have been working on this for the past four years, and I am so unbelievably excited to show people. I’ve been working with some of my best friends—some of the coolest writers in the world. This is the biggest thing coming out from Moore Kismet to date. 

Take it from Moore Kismet: Artist Wrapped is not to be missed. Artists can log in or sign up for Spotify for Artists to view their sharecard and microsite experience, now available in 31 languages. 

Learn More About the Audio Aura in Your Spotify 2021 Wrapped With Aura Reader Mystic Michaela

The songs we listen to and the playlists we create are reflections of us. They make us dance like nobody’s watching, or sing at the top of our lungs. You may not even realize it, but the music you stream matches your individual “Audio Aura”—something you may have seen in your 2021 Wrapped experience

What is an aura? According to aura reader and host of the Know Your Aura with Mystic Michaela podcast, Mystic Michaela, it’s your personal energy signature. Everyone has one, and aura readers see them as a combination of colors, each representative of the traits that make you, you. 

Every year, Spotify gives listeners a personal summary of their listening habits through Wrapped. And this year, for eligible users, Wrapped includes something new: your Audio Aura. 

Like you, audio has energy, so Spotify data curators worked with Mystic Michaela to connect your listening habits in 2021 to the aura spectrum by assigning a color to each of six mood descriptor categories (including “happy,” “calm,” and “hopeful,”) and matching them with tracks on Spotify. 

After we created your personalized 2021 Wrapped experience, we assigned a weight percentage to the two audio “moods” that best represent your listening, and the final product is a swirling gradient of color. Below are the six moods and corresponding hues that could come up in your 2021 Wrapped Audio Aura.

  • Purple: This aura color pairs well with passionate music listeners. Purple auras tune in to get amped up, entertained, and moving while they navigate the twists and turns of their day. 
  • Green: Calm, analytical, and introspective are the traits that describe a green aura. These listeners gravitate toward complex music to tame their fast-moving minds. 
  • Pink: Often described as the hopeless romantics of the aura spectrum, pinks view the world with a sense of optimistic, childlike wonder. 
  • Orange: Oranges are the rebellious and bold type. They share a need for high-energy, confidence-boosting sounds.
  • Yellow: Yellows like their music to align them to the goals of their day, fueling their need for focus, motivation, and self improvement all while reducing any nerves that could get in the way.
  • Blue: Blues are wistful or emotional, and this hue reflects listeners who seek out music to feel their feelings out loud. 

We spoke with Mystic Michaela to learn more about auras, their relationship to music, and how knowing your aura can help you find your authentic self. 

How did you realize you could see and read auras? 

I’ve seen colors around people my entire life. It’s a sense to me, just like smelling. But I didn’t have a formal way of thinking about it until I was a Spanish teacher. I realized that I was differentiating instruction [to my middle school students] based on their aura colors. I saw that children with red auras thrived in competition. I saw that children with yellow auras really needed to focus on grammar. I saw that children with purple auras got the language a lot better when they could create art with it. 

And so through that, I realized, this is much bigger than just colors around people. This is about people understanding themselves and understanding that “I work this way, and you work that way.” Both are OK, but you have to use this information to dive into who you are, not who you think you should be.

How do the Audio Auras provide additional insights to a person’s Wrapped?

When listeners go into their Audio Auras, I really feel like they are going to be able to see more of themselves and have an inward conversation. You know, “Who am I and why do I listen to what I’m listening to? What am I seeking? What is my inner self actually saying?” And I think that’s going to be a really creative and spiritual conversation people can have with themselves, however they want to define that.

One of your primary goals is to help people live their lives authentically. How might a person’s Audio Aura help them do that?

Let’s say I get yellow as one of my colors, because the Audio Aura yellow is very much about self-improvement and motivation and calming one’s nerves. Then I would ask myself, “Is this me, or is this something that I strive toward? What am I calming my nerves about? What parts of my life are requiring that type of energy to come in and help me?”

I think it’s helpful to ask yourself some of those questions, because your Audio Aura reveals the energy you feel comfortable in and also the vibes you want to borrow. 

Throughout our lives, we’re constantly pretending to be somebody [else]. You might wear a different energy color to fit in. But when you put in your earbuds, when you put your playlist together—that’s you. And when you press next, or if you say, “I like that, I’m going to listen to it 10 times,” that’s you. And that’s why I feel so connected to Audio Auras, because whatever that reflects, it’s an extension of yourself. 

Ready for your reading? Head to Spotify.com/Wrapped for your personalized Audio Aura and the full 2021 Wrapped experience.