Tag: Apache 207

Spotify Celebrates 10 Years in Germany

It’s been 10 years since Spotify first launched in Germany, and what a decade it’s been. In that time, German listeners have streamed music on Spotify more than 450 billion times. There have been plenty of local picks available for fans, too, as more than 150,000 German-language artists are on the platform.

But music isn’t the only reason Germans flock to Spotify. Podcasts are very popular in this market, with more than 70,000 German-language pods on Spotify. And here’s a fun fact: from January 2017 to December 2021, German listeners streamed 1.3 billion hours of podcasts on our platform. 

“Being able to listen to your favorite music anytime, anywhere, and completely legally was one of the main objectives when Spotify was founded in 2006. Between the launch in March 2012 and February 2022, listeners in Germany streamed 310 million personalized playlists, thus creating their own personal audio moments,” shared Michael Krause, General Manager Europe at Spotify. “All in all, we are pleased with the positive growth of Spotify in the German market to date and also look forward to continuing to shape the future of audio with innovations and content.”

To celebrate the decade, we’re taking a look back at some of the major moments the German market has experienced.

Tune in to these highlights for listeners

  • September 2013: We launched Spotify Connect, allowing listeners to stream across multiple devices like their TV, gaming console, or speakers.
  • September 2014: Spotify Premium Family became available for family members living under the same roof.
  • July 2015: The first personalized playlist called Your Mix of the Week debuted.
  • December 2015: Spotify started sharing its annual Wrapped review of the top lists of the most successful artists, songs, and albums worldwide while also giving users insights into their very individual listening behavior.
  • May 2016: Fest & Flauschig, the first-ever worldwide Spotify podcast, launched.
  • October 2019: Daily Drive, the first playlist to combine podcasts and music, became available for listeners. 
  • November 2021: The Lyrics feature, which displays in-app song lyrics, rolled out for listeners.

Showing support for German creators

It’s a priority for Spotify to work with emerging talent and amplify their music and podcasts to reach new audiences. Sound Up, Spotify’s podcast education program for underrepresented creators, was launched in Germany in 2019. RADAR, Spotify’s emerging artist program debuted in 2020, and EQUAL, Spotify’s program to foster equity for women in the music and audio space, got its start in 2021.

Ten years of top songs, podcasts, and trends

  • The most-streamed song was “Roller” by Apache 207, followed by Tones And I’s “Dance Monkey” and The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights.” 
  • Hip-hop held a solid place in listeners’ earbuds as CRO was the most-streamed artist in 2012, and Bonez MC claimed the top artist spot in 2021.
  • In 2018, Fest & Flauschig, the first Spotify Exclusive podcast, took the spot of the most-streamed podcast globally.
  • In Berlin, listeners streamed a particularly high volume of music in 2021. The capital city ranked first among German cities where the most music was streamed on Spotify last year. 
  • On December 24, 2021, a new record was set: it was the day the most music was streamed on Spotify in Germany since 2012.
  • Favorite genres didn’t change much over the years; pop music was the most popular genre in 2012 and it remained so in 2021.
  • Podcasts are as popular as ever: more than half of the 18- to 24-year-olds in Germany regularly stream podcasts. Among 25- to 34-year-olds, the figure is over 40%.

 

To learn more about this decade of streaming decadence, grab your party hat and head on over to Spotify Germany’s 10th Anniversary website.

Apache 207, Juju, Summer Cem, and More Headline Live Modus Mio Concert

For the second year in a row, hip-hop fans in Germany had the opportunity to witness a favorite Spotify playlist, Modus Mio, come to life on the big stage.

In honor of the playlist—which has over 1.3 million followers—Spotify brought some of the biggest names in the German hip-hop game to the Warsteiner Music Hall in Dortmund on December 14. For the second annual “Modus Mio Live On Stage,” artists including Kreuzberg phenomenon Ufo361, Juju, Summer Cem, Azet, KALIM, and Apache 207 performed many of their chart-topping hits for an über-enthusiastic crowd.

From Humble Origins, German Rap Is Now a Dominant Commercial Force

Hip-hop has proven to be one of music’s most customizable and popular genres around the world, with both beats and bars that reflect the unique characteristics of an artist’s background. In this series, we’ll follow the genre around the world, showcasing how hip-hop has been brought to life in different regions, countries, and cultures.

In Germany, the summer of 2019 will go down in history as the tipping point for hip-hop. The genre (called “Deutschrap” at home) has been going strong since the early ’90s, but the past two years have seen it rise sharply to become a chart-dominating force, laying claim to no fewer than half of this past summer’s top 10 hits.

That newfound cultural currency isn’t limited to the charts: Spotify’s dedicated German hip-hop playlist Modus Mio has more than 1 million followers. A two-city live version of Modus Mio last year showcased the enthusiasm and camaraderie of today’s rising German rappers, with Nura (who released her colorful, confident debut solo album this year) memorably stage diving during pop-savvy headliner RIN’s set. She then collaborated onstage with both Jamaica-influenced MC Trettmann and rapper, singer, and multi-instrumentalist Bausa, whose slinky 2017 single “Was du Liebe nennst” stayed atop the German singles charts for eight straight weeks.

A second Modus Mio Live will come to Dortmund on December 14, assembling six of the top artists from the playlist: cloud-rap breakout Ufo361 (who has nearly 4 million monthly listeners), quicksilver female MC Juju, unflappable Deutschrap veteran Summer Cem, new-school gangsta rapper Azet, polished chart mainstay Apache 207, and the hard-bitten yet charismatic Kalim. The variety captured in that cross-section alone shows the healthy range of German hip-hop today.

The playlist’s success has also spawned a podcast, Vor der Mio, in which journalist and broadcaster Salwa Houmsi interviews some of Modus Mio’s most popular artists in the places where they grew up. Houmsi, a half-German, half-Syrian activist who also DJs, has interviewed Juju in Berlin-Neukӧlln, Summer Cem in Mönchengladbach, and the street rapper Olexesh in Kiev (among others) since launching the podcast in July.

The podcast’s premise is no accident: the different cities and specific neighborhoods where rappers came up are every bit as important to them as the wider cultural heritage of their families. Each urban district or regional town has its own vivid identity within German culture, and the bonds of friendship formed in those early days often stay strong across a lifetime.

Case in point: Rüsselsheim, in the country’s southwest, is a six-hour drive from Berlin yet provides a continuing source of inspiration to proud native MERO, who broke through with short social media videos before topping the German and Austrian charts with his 2018 debut single “Baller los.” “It’s always affected me a lot,” he says of his home city and, specifically, its Digger Busch district. “All [the] people I am on tour with today are from there. We grew up together as a family.” 

For Kalim, who raps often about daily life in his native patch of Hamburg, the creative impact of one’s longtime surroundings can’t be overstated. “My city influences my music very much,” he says, citing his home district as a great source of inspiration for his lyrics. “If I had grown up just one district [away], my music would not be the same today.”

When RIN, who headlined the first Modus Mio Live last year, was asked about the rap scene in his home city of Stuttgart in a 2017 interview, he said that the town’s lack of an existing scene left him and his collaborators to build their own from scratch. So even the would-be musical absences of a given place can have an empowering effect on a young or future rapper coming of age there.

That strong bond between rappers and where they come from also resonates with Germany’s large crop of artists of international origins. Turkish by heritage, MERO scored a hit this year with “Olabilir,” a track with Turkish and German lyrics. Likewise, Summer Cem’s 2018 track “Tamam Tamam” brandishes a few Turkish words in the hook.

Other artists with migrant backgrounds include German rapper Capital Bra, who pays homage to his Russian roots during the hook of the 2018 track “Berlin lebt.” There’s also Eno, a rapper of Kurdish descent, who calls back to his heritage musically on 2018’s “Cane Cane,” while Farid Bang musically embraces his Moroccan and Spanish heritage on this year’s “Maghreb Gang.”

“The German hip-hop sound that evolved over the last two years is a unique movement led by artists with [a migrant] background—similar to movements in Italy, the Netherlands, [and] France,” says Head of Music for Germany, Switzerland and Austria, Maik Pallasch. “It’s great to see the rise of all these artists, and particularly the spotlight put on the cultural variety in our society.”

Despite being from all over the world, most of today’s young German rappers perform primarily in German. “All the most-streamed hip-hop artists in Germany are rapping/singing in German,” says Maik. “It’s easier to explain yourself in your own language and transport what you mean and feel in your lyrics.” From there, they usually mix in their local dialect with choice slang terms to create songs that are bouncy melting pots for the ears.

The desire for these artists to both honor their roots and find inspiration in their current whereabouts makes sense. After all, from its birth in New York City’s Bronx four decades ago to its current mainstream clout in Germany, hip-hop has always hinged on rappers communicating who they are and where they’re from. Kalim underscores that idea by likening his work to long-lasting images, emphasizing that his creative evolution—like that of his Deutschrap peers—is by no means finished.

“The important task is to make snapshots timeless,” he says, reflecting on the working process behind his lyrical portraits of his own daily life in Germany. “That takes time, effort, and—above all—love of music. For me it’s a continuous process, and I am still evolving and learning.”

Fans around the world can check out Deutschrap on Spotify’s Modus Mio playlist.