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Dan Pal's avatar

Excellent research. My issue with how we evaluate the popularity of music today is that we just focus on streaming numbers. When Taylor Swift releases a new album and all of the tracks make the top ten that week can we really say those songs are popular? The Hot 100 is reflecting something completely different than it did 30+ years ago. I think this system of evaluating streams keeps newer and indie artists from getting the attention they deserve. It's hard to see songs spending a year on the charts when there is so much other great music trying to get more ears to listen to it. There are niches of music that are under served by the charts today.

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Charles in San Francisco's avatar

Great article, and useful too. I have been writing about the industrialization of songwriting and other ills of the music industry (here is a sample: https://zapatosjam.substack.com/p/the-songwriters-who-ate-america-part?utm_source=publication-search) and it's helpful to have these kinds of data as a reality check. I have to say I am surprised that song length peaked in the late 1990s--as a fan of prog rock and metal I would have expected the peak to have been much earlier. The bigger question is what about music outside the US/UK ecosystem? Some 95% of the world's music (and music audience) is not captured in U.S. chart data. What would it take to extend the study to capture other major markets (eg., Japan, India, China, Nigeria). That would be fascinating.

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