Home East Africa Spotify Keeps Kenyan Fans Connected Through Music Even When Physically Apart

Spotify Keeps Kenyan Fans Connected Through Music Even When Physically Apart

by Wanjiku Mbugua

Collaborative Playlists and Group Sessions have gained popularity across Sub Saharan Africa

Music has always been a universal language helping people through the ages to communicate and connect without the need for added conversation or even words.

Music can help us unlock the deepest parts of ourselves, and act as a unifier. Bringing people together to share their thoughts, feelings and emotions whether they are suburbs, cities or continents apart.

This has never been truer than in recent times. Removing the opportunity for people to connect in person has amplified the need to create experiences to still engage with those closest to us in ways that are both meaningful, emotive and transcend distance.

Several surveys conducted over the past year have showcased how the Gen Z audience in particular have been craving shared communal experiences.  Over the same period Spotify  has also noted an increase in content streaming as people seek out ways to stay entertained and informed as well as connected.

Spotify has also seen an increase in the number of people using the platform to co-create and share audio content – using their favourite music as a key communication form to create those engaging experiences.

Collaborative playlists are a fun and easy way for users to co-curate playlists with friends, by each adding their favourite tracks. Creating a playlist that has a ‘feel’ of each user gives people the experience of being together.  The popularity of collaborative playlists across sub-Saharan Africa was showcased in recent data released by Spotify.

Kenya saw a 40% increase in collaborative playlist plays and over the past 90 days, collaborative playlists received the third highest plays in Africa, with “Calling my phone” by 6LACK and Lil Tjay as the most played track in local collaborative playlists.

Another wonderful way to share is through Group Sessions, which allow for the simultaneous listening of songs and podcasts. In the past 90 days, South Africa had the second highest group session listening rate across sub-Saharan Africa. The top 3 most popular tracks in group sessions in Kenya were “Baby Bumblebee’’ by Julie Gardner“Butter by BTS” and “Niko Sawa by Bien and Nviiri The Storyteller”.

“Features such as collaborative playlists and group sessions aid music discovery – a key imperative for Spotify. As Spotify’s presence and popularity continues to grow across Africa, we are encouraged that our audience are continuing to uncover and explore the many features on offer that can only amplify their listening experience. Spotify is so much more than simply an audio streaming service.

Users can ‘’soundtrack their lives’’ from the moment they wake up to when they go to sleep at night, and everything in between and seamlessly share this across other social media apps like Facebook and Instagram. The platform provides an opportunity to connect through a shared love of music, providing comfort to many over the isolation of the past months.” says Phiona Okumu, Head of Music, Sub Saharan Africa.

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