Do you love sharing your favorite music with friends?

That's what Spotify users are doing now that they can see their newest Spotify Wrapped — a snapshot of a user's listening habits over the last year that can easily be shared on social media.

The buzz around the latest Spotify Wrapped rollout is a bright spot for the company, which recently announced that it's laying off around 1,500 people.

This year, Spotify, which is a financial partner of NPR, added some new features to Wrapped. This included placing users in the city that most aligns with their music taste. It also classified users into groups based on their listening habits — like the vampire, who prefers emotional, atmospheric music or the time traveler, who listens to old songs again and again.

We reached out to Spotify for comment for this story and did not hear back.

Morning Edition host Michel Martin said she doesn't need Spotify to tell her that her favorite artist is Beyoncé. Her co-host Steve Inskeep said his top song on Apple Music was Buddy Holly's 1958 hit, "Rave On."

But for the rest of us — why are we so obsessed with sharing our year-end aggregations with the world?

"We love it because it's irresistible," Brian Uzzi, a professor of leadership and social networks at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management told NPR's Morning Edition.

He said that Spotify Wrapped satisfies two competing human desires.

"We really want to be part of the group, but at the same time we want to be different from everybody," Uzzi said.

Users can feel unique by being told they listened to their favorite artists way more than other people on Spotify.

"And that had never really been done in music before," Uzzi said of Spotify's level of listening data given back to users.

Before Spotify Wrapped launched in 2015, websites like Last.fm allowed users to track their listening habits. But Spotify popularized giving users customized infographics — practically begging to be posted to an Instagram story.

Other apps do this too — like Duolingo, a language learning platform that lets users share how many words they learned and what learning style they have.

Nick Seaver, assistant professor of anthropology at Tufts University, said that music recommender systems like Spotify and Pandora are more powerful in determining personal music taste than people may realize.

"We often think that we have taste first, and then recommender systems are either good at figuring out our taste or not," Seaver said. "But what we see in practice is that people develop their taste in music over time, in interactions with technologies and listening to music."

He said that we like things that reflect ourselves back to ourselves.

"People like to identify themselves with the objects that they consume, with the things they listen to, with the things they watch, with the things they read," Seaver said. "And so it's a sort of normal bit of human culture."

There's also an element of surprise in seeing Spotify Wrapped results for the first time.

"It might reveal something about yourself that you did not know," Seaver said. "And I think some people find that exciting. Some people find that annoying. Some people find it offensive."

In an era of data privacy concerns and skepticism about tech companies, it might seem surprising why people still love sharing their Spotify Wrapped — a tension Seaver calls the privacy paradox.

"People on the one hand say they value their privacy. But on the other hand, give up a lot of their data," Seaver said.

"I think there are critics who will see Spotify Wrapped as a way of normalizing some kind of data tracking or surveillance," he added. "But I wouldn't want to understate the degree to which people often enjoy seeing themselves reflected back."

Beyond the human desire to understand ourselves, the issue of data privacy is complex.

Seaver said that many researchers who work on the privacy paradox are critical of framing it as a paradox "because it suggests that we have an option to keep our privacy."

The radio version of this story was edited by Adam Bearne and the digital version of this story was edited by Treye Green.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Transcript

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

OK. So if you use music streaming services like Spotify or Apple Music, then you already know this. But just in case, you have a chance to review your year in song. And this time of year, people receive Spotify Wrapped, a recap of their listening habits easily shared on social media.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Spotify recently announced that it's laying off around 1,500 workers, but the beat goes on.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "SUMMER RENAISSANCE")

BEYONCE: (Singing) Dance, dance, dance. Ooh, it's so good. It's so good. It's so good. It's so good. It's so good.

MARTIN: OK, now, I do not need Spotify to tell me that Beyonce is my favorite, but why are people so obsessed with sharing their results?

BRIAN UZZI: We love it because it's irresistible.

INSKEEP: Brian Uzzi is a Northwestern University professor who studies social networks and says Spotify Wrapped satisfies two competing human desires.

UZZI: We really want to be part of a group, but at the same time, we want to be different from everybody.

MARTIN: And this year, Spotify, which is an NPR financial partner, sorted users into groups like vampires, who prefer emotional, atmospheric music.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "VAMPIRE")

OLIVIA RODRIGO: (Singing) 'Cause I've made some real big mistakes. But you make the worst one look fine. I should've known it was strange...

INSKEEP: She's got a song about a vampire - or time travelers who listen to old songs again and again.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "RAVE ON")

BUDDY HOLLY: (Singing) A-weh-uh-heh-uh-ell. The little things you say and do make me want to be with...

BUDDY HOLLY AND STEVE INSKEEP: (Singing) You-ah-hoo.

MARTIN: At the same time, users - this is your favorite, right?

INSKEEP: Yeah.

MARTIN: At the same time, users can feel special by being told they listen to their favorite artists way more than other people on Spotify.

INSKEEP: Other apps also allow you to show off your habits and accomplishments, like Duolingo, which is a language learning platform that lets you share how many words you have learned and your learning style. That could be anything from polyglot pupil, someone who studied so many languages at once, to a fiery phoenix, those who took a break and started learning again.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

AUTOMATED VOICE: (Non-English language spoken).

(SOUNDBITE OF DUOLINGO CORRECT TONE)

INSKEEP: Nick Seaver, an anthropologist at Tufts University, says it's all about putting an image of yourself out into the world.

NICK SEAVER: People like to identify themselves with the objects that they consume, with the things they listen to, with the things they watch, with the things they read. And so it's a sort of normal bit of human culture.

MARTIN: Seaver wrote a book about music recommender systems like Spotify and Pandora.

SEAVER: They're part of a long history of using data about media consumption to reveal things that you might not have known about yourself, about your taste.

INSKEEP: Speaking of taste, our podcast Up First was on the Spotify charts for a total of 43 weeks this year. That put us in the top 1%.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)

INSKEEP: According to our Spotify Wrapped. Thanks for listening.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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