Spotify Just Discovered That Heavy Metal is More Popular Than Pop Music

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Spotify Just Discovered That Heavy Metal is More Popular Than Pop Music

Source - Noisey by Vice:

Every diehard metalhead alive and breathing knows that A. heavy metal is the law, and B. other genres pale in comparison, but it’s always nice to see some quantifiable data to that effect, outside of what you and your friends howl at one another during especially spirited bouts of Kreator worship. Spotify threw heshers a bone recently by releasing a slew of figures that detail by exactly how wide a margin heavy metal is ruling the streaming airwaves.

The study sought to determine which genre’s fans were the most loyal—i.e. returned most frequently to their favorite artists. As Spotify noted, “To create a measure of genre loyalty, we divided the number of streams each core artist had by their number of listeners. All of the charts are normalized against the genre with the loyalest fans.” Surprise! Metal was the clear winner. From Portugal to the United States to (of course) Norway, metal holds down a spot in the top ten—and usually top five—most loyally listened to genres in every country included in the study. Metal also takes the overall global genre loyalty crown, leaving pop to trail behind as a distant second and folk, country, and hip-hop to founder in the dust.

As Mashable notes, Spotify calculated their data around sets of core bands for each genre, with metal’s champions comprising Metallica, Slayer, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Sepultura, Pantera, Cradle of Filth and Anthrax. It’s not exactly surprising to hear that a lot of people are using Spotify to listen to classic tunes from Slayer and Papa Het and that metal listeners are especially likely to revisit favorite artists, but what is at least a little jarring to see how thoroughly flummoxed some folks are about it.


Image via Spotify

Given metal fans’ fierce loyalty to their chosen genre and propensity for making physical purchases, it makes perfect sense that they’d be spending the most time pressing replay on old Iron Maiden songs. As the label personnel interviewed in the Mashable piece noted, metal labels have been selling cassettes and vinyl for years, metal shirts and embroidered logo patches are de rigeur attire, metal festivals regularly draw fans from every corner of the globe, and there’s still a multitude of metal print magazines and fanzines circulating in a world that’s gone mostly digital. While fans of most other genres are drawn to shiny new artists, metal fandom is generational; new recruits are encouraged to appreciate the bands that came before and build up chronological knowledge while still keeping abreast of current developments. That widened musical net funnels directly into more sales; when someone’s buying up the new Mefitic record, they’re probably also beefing up their Blasphemy collection or finally grabbing that Hellhammer box set. Metalheads are completists, and metal as a genre is incredibly diverse; there are thousands upon thousands of metal bands out there to whom fans may pledge fealty, and they do so with an (economic) vengeance.

This approach isn’t entirely unique to metal fans, but they definitely take it further than nearly any other demographic. It’s not as easy to be a metal fan as it is to profess your love for Taylor Swift or Makonnen, and metalheads’ extreme devotion to their chosen scene is often a response to societal pressure. When the whole world is telling you that the music you love is stupid, evil, or unlistenable, you’re either going to tamp down your interest and keep your tastes to yourself… or you’re going to deck yourself out in band shirts, go to shows played by and attended by like-minded individuals, and make your allegiances known at every possible opportunity.

Source: Noisey by Vice

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