Tag: Earth

Celebrate Earth Day With Audiobooks That Educate and Entertain

This year marks the 55th anniversary of Earth Day, celebrated annually on April 22. On Spotify, listeners can explore a world of stories about our planet in our Everything Earth Day hub, which features curated audiobook playlists for all ages and interests. We tapped our editors to share five of their favorite picks.

Zonia’s Rain Forest 

By Juana Martinez-Neal
Narrated by Sisa Quispe and Cinthya Gonzales Perez

Zonia’s Rain Forest takes young readers into the wonders of the Amazon rainforest alongside Zonia, an Asháninka girl. Every morning, the rainforest calls to Zonia…but one morning, it calls to her in a troubled voice. How will Zonia answer?

The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year

By Margaret Renkl
Narrated by Margaret Renkl

Bestselling author Margaret Renkl charts the creatures and plants found in her own backyard over the course of a year, weaving a tale of joy in the pleasures of the natural world and grief over each season’s ending. Along the way, we also glimpse the changing rhythms of human life.

The Climate Book: The Facts and the Solutions

By Greta Thunberg
Narrated by Amelia Stubberfield, Greta Thunberg, Nicholas Khan, and Olivia Forrest

Greta Thunberg, known around the world for her climate activism, shares advice to help secure a safe future for life on Earth. Thunberg weaves her own story with the wisdom of more than 100 experts—from geophysicists to economists to philosophers—to equip us with the knowledge we need to combat climate disaster.

Black Flora: Inspiring Profiles of Floriculture’s New Vanguard

By Teresa Speight
Narrated by Lynnette R. Freeman

Black Flora is the first book to feature profiles of contemporary Black experts innovating in the world of flowers. Longtime gardener Teresa Speight unearths the floral legacies of the past and present, providing inspiration for younger generations of plant lovers seeking examples of successful Black floral artists and entrepreneurs.

Migrations: A Novel 

By Charlotte McConaghy
Narrated by Barrie Kreinik

Migrations is an ode to a disappearing world with Franny Stone as its center, as she arrives in Greenland with nothing but her research gear. Her singular purpose is to follow the last Arctic terns in the world on what might be their final migration to Antarctica. But when Franny’s dark secrets catch up with her, how much is she willing to risk for one more chance at redemption?

Looking for more inspiring tales? Head to our Everything Earth Day hub.

Celebrate Earth Day With New Music Featuring the Sounds of Nature

Music has the power to connect us to one another and to the world around us. Spotify is once again teaming up with the Museum for the United Nations – UN Live’s Sounds Right initiative to celebrate that connection and amplify the sounds of nature.

Since launching NATURE as an official artist on Spotify and other streaming platforms last year, Sounds Right has highlighted its beauty to millions. This year, the initiative’s Earth Day celebration includes new tracks from more than 30 artists where NATURE is a featured artist—from birdsong and crashing waves to glaciers and rainforest wildlife.

This unique collection of songs can be found in the feat. NATURE playlist featured within the Sounds Right shelf on Spotify, with the tracks crediting NATURE supporting its conservation.

From classical compositions to pop anthems, the new music showcases a diverse range of global talent. The lineup includes French composer Yann Tiersen, Indian pop sensation Armaan Malik, electronic powerhouse Steve Angello of Swedish House Mafia, Seattle indie-rocker SYML, and Indian American singer-songwriter Raveena. These artists follow in the footsteps of previous NATURE collaborators like Brian Eno, Ellie Goulding, and Lykke Li.

Spotify will also amplify Sounds Right’s mission year-round, spotlighting a new single featuring NATURE each quarter. To kick us off this Earth Day, we’re highlighting three tracks from the new batch of releases: “Wake (in the Olympic Mountains and the Puget Sound) feat. NATURE” by SYML, “What In The World (feat. NATURE)” by Armaan Malik, and “Morning Prayer (feat. NATURE)” by Raveena. Spotify will promote these songs on- and off-platform, celebrating each artist’s unique approach to incorporating nature into their work.

“I’m honored to be a part of the NATURE project,” said SYML. “Nature surrounds us all, but I particularly love nature from my part of the world. I chose some lovely sounds from the Olympic mountain range and Puget Sound region in Washington State. The mountains and waterways are a big part of how I was raised, and now I’m pleased to bring up my own children in the beauty of the Pacific Northwest. No matter where we find ourselves, it’s up to all of us to take care of what was here before, leaving it only better.”

NATURE has been making waves on Spotify, reaching more than 11 million listeners over the past year. By providing a platform for Sounds Right and this innovative initiative, Spotify is helping to build awareness and inspire climate action in a way that feels authentic and impactful.

Stream the feat. NATURE playlist on Spotify and check out NATURE’s artist profile for more.

The Saturday Night Sensation of Earth, Wind & Fire’s ‘September’

“It was one of those mornings,” begins Al McKay, remembering the creation of a song that, four decades on, ignites a disco inferno every weekend—especially in the UK, and notably at a very specific time. “I came downstairs feeling really good,” the musician continues. “Went to my studio, set up a groove, and it just came piece by piece by piece. I brought it to Maurice, and he liked it right away. Then he said, ‘Play it again.’ And I kept playing it for him. The last time, he looked at me and he sang, ‘Do you remember …’”

The time was late spring/early summer 1978. McKay was a songwriter, guitarist, and member of Earth, Wind & Fire. “Maurice” was Maurice White, the American band’s leader. And the freshly composed tune was “September”—or, in the words of another of the cowriters, Allee Willis, “the song that wouldn’t die.”

Forty years since the single’s original release on November 18, 1978, “September” is, in 2018, a Saturday night sensation in the UK. Every weekend, streams of the soul-dance anthem enjoy, on average, a 17 percent uptick—and that’s from the already-increased Friday night streaming figures.

The irrepressible Ms. Willis isn’t wrong in her assessment. Spotify plays for “September” currently stand at over 384 million—a good way ahead of Earth, Wind & Fire’s second-most-popular song on the platform, “Boogie Wonderland.” Despite being a bigger hit at the time, it “only” has 98 million plays. In the UK in 2017, “September” was the most popular single from the ’70s, with 17.5 million streams. The blockbuster cartoon musical “Trolls” more than likely had something to do with that. Released at the end of 2016, the film was a smash hit, and so was its soundtrack. At one end was the lead single, Justin Timberlake’s global wonder “Can’t Stop The Feeling,” which was nominated for an Oscar in 2017. At the other, playing out over the closing credits, was “September,” as performed by Timberlake, voice star Anna Kendrick, and Earth, Wind & Fire.

Willis was a struggling 29-year-old songwriter in Los Angeles when she received the call to come work with Earth, Wind & Fire, initially on a new track for the band’s first Best Of, which was “September’s” initial purpose. She has firsthand experience of that weekend phenomenon, and offers a simple explanation.

“It is a song that is impossible to be unhappy to,” she tells us. “For years, certainly since social media proliferated, every single week, on Sunday or Monday, I get a trillion videos of people [singing along] at weddings, bar mitzvahs, barbeques, graduation parties …

“It’s just a feel-good song, a timeless groove—the record doesn’t sound dated at all. And this year is the first time I’ve become aware that there are ‘21st night of September’ parties all over the world,” she notes, referring to the date mentioned in the lyric. “A thousand that I know of, but I’m sure there’s more.”

And even more specifically: Spotify’s data shows that in the UK on a Saturday night, the song is most streamed between the hours of 5 p.m. and 8 p.m., peaking at 6 p.m. Those timings mesh with the idea of people, young and old, letting their hair down at family gatherings. And if you’re going out on a Saturday night, what better way to get the party started than a blast of September as you polish up your dancing shoes?

They also mesh with another aspect of the ongoing vitality of a four-decades old American disco tune: September has found a new lease of life at football (that is, soccer) grounds up and down the UK. Fans of various English and Scottish teams have incorporated the White/Willis/McKay co-write into their arsenal of terrace anthems, of which there is a deep, long and occasionally baffling tradition: the riff to The White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army being chanted en masse is understandable; football-based lyrical reboots of The Beach Boys’ version of Sloop John B, less so. Usually a team’s fans change the words to salute this or that star player. And, with most Saturday football matches in the UK finishing at 4:45.p.m., a reprise of that afternoon’s big singalong once home an hour so later makes sense – especially if your team won.

Taylor Swift Records “Delicate” and Earth, Wind & Fire’s “September” for Spotify Singles

Hot off the heels of her vertical video release for “Delicate,” Taylor Swift is back with two new Spotify Singles – special acoustic renditions of “Delicate” and Earth, Wind & Fire’s September,” which were recorded at The Tracking Room in Nashville, TN.

Taylor said, “Delicate” is a song about the vulnerability that immediately surfaces in all of us the minute we meet someone we want to like us. We think about everything they might’ve heard about us, every reason they wouldn’t want us. Every step forward toward that other person scares us, but it thrills us too. Delicate is about the balancing act of the rush and the fear, and hoping it’s really worth it to take that chance.” In addition, Taylor chose “September” for sentimental reasons. She’s always loved the classic tune by Earth, Wind & Fire, written by Maurice White, Al McKay and Allee Willis.

Taylor is a fan of Spotify Singles. Swifties will remember that she incorporated two Spotify Singles tracks on her personally curated Songs Taylor Loves Spotify playlist.

Taylor’s newest Spotify Singles couldn’t come at a better time. As the singer prepares for the Taylor Swift reputation Stadium Tour starting on May 8th in Glendale, AZ, the new recordings are sure to excite fans while they gear up for the concert with their own Taylor-inspired playlists.

Fans can check out Taylor’s two new Spotify Singles HERE.