Forget Spotify Wrapped (especially since, as I’ve blabbed my friends’ ears off about, I don’t even have a Spotify)—according to my last.fm, which has been tracking all the music I’ve listened to since mid-2011, and which I’ve been painstakingly curating to maintain perfect accuracy this year:
I listened to 27,115 total songs last year, which comes out to 74 a day!
Monthly averages ranged from a low of 57 (May) to a high of 97 (December).
The listening time isn’t super reliable with last.fm’s user-sourced database, so I can’t report on that, but I’ve conservatively estimated that it’s around 100,000 minutes, which is four and a half hours a day, or 69 straight days.
Compared to previous years, this is the second-highest number of songs I’ve ever listened to, behind only 2020 (28,616), because, ya know, pandemic. (Third was 2022 with 26,530 songs.) A big reason I’ve listened to so much this year is that I can now listen to music all night at work while I write!
My most-listened artists and albums are below.
Note the three musical mollusks! (Squid, Colossal Squid, and My Octopus Mind)
This award goes to the album I listened to the most this year which I discovered at least a full calendar year prior.
And the winner is (again)… with 13 play-throughs (again)…
I can’t describe how much I love this album. Randomly found through the pirate site’s thread on Russian music recommendations, this dark, moody, immaculately produced synthpop album shepherded me through the lonely first few months of covid quarantine that were coupled with a redoubled heartbreak. It’s an immensely comforting album for me, one that finds the beauty in the pain and wallows in it, dances in it. While only five of the album’s thirteen tracks feature Mujuice’s brooding vocals, the instrumental ones speak for themselves, layering complex emotions over glitched timbres and beautiful melodies that evoke freezing landscapes and yet are layered with warm tones and crackles.
Shout-out to the runner-up, Belfast math/post-rock band And So I Watch You From Afar’s 2009 self-titled debut album (link), which I listened to 10 times!