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Spotify now wants you to relive your entire music personality arc

This new feature is a nostalgia bomb for your Spotify music library

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Spotify Wrapped usually gives you a quick snapshot of your year in music. Spotify 20 goes much further back, and that makes it a lot more personal.

To celebrate its 20th anniversary, Spotify has launched Spotify 20: Your Party of the Year(s), a new mobile-only in-app experience that looks at your full listening history on the platform. It shows your first day on Spotify, the total number of unique songs you have played, your first streamed song, and your all-time most-streamed artist. Spotify is also giving users an All-Time Top Songs Playlist with their 120 most-played tracks, including play counts.

What does your Spotify history say about you?

That turns the feature into something closer to a musical diary than a normal stats recap. Your Spotify account probably remembers the song you played during a college phase, the artist you overplayed after a breakup, the gym playlist you once took way too seriously, and the track you quietly returned to for years without realizing it.

The most charming part may be the first-streamed song. It is the kind of stat that can be weirdly emotional, deeply embarrassing, or both. A single song can pull up an old version of you faster than any photo album. In my case, that song was Baba O’Riley by The Who, which had been stuck in my head after playing the 2012 Need for Speed: Most Wanted.

Why is Spotify making this so shareable?

Like Wrapped, Spotify has made these throwback moments shareable. Each story includes a share card that can be saved, sent to friends, or posted online. The experience is available on mobile across 144 markets and in 16 languages. Users can find it by opening the Spotify app and searching “Spotify 20” or “Party of the Year(s),” or by visiting Spotify’s 20th anniversary page on mobile.

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The 120-track playlist is also easy to miss. It appears on the final slide of your Spotify 20 experience, where you need to claim it to save it to your library. Spotify has also added editorial playlists around major eras, movements, and cultural shifts from the past two decades. These playlists can be found in the hub on Spotify.

Sudhanshu Kumar Mangalam
I’ve got about 4 years of experience, mostly covering gaming, PC hardware, and smartphones. In my free time, I like…
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