Spotify has launched their annual end-of-year ‘Wrapped’ feature, allowing subscribers to see the stats behind their listening habits.
Once again, members of The Independent have discovered their personal most-listened-to tracks of the year, the results ranging from Run the Jewels to Ed Sheeran.
Below, our (partly embarrassed) staff offer some reasoning as to why
they blasted the same song over and over again. (You can find out yours
through this link and see our results from last year.)
Arcade Fire, ‘Creature Comfort’
‘Creature
Comfort’ — the love child of ‘Reflektor and ‘Month of May’ — is an
unapologetic thrill ride comprised of humming synths and stomping bass
delivered in Talking Heads-style drawl by Win Butler. Arcade Fire’s
intimate show at London’s York Hall is to thank for this track’s
victory, amassing at least five listens a day ever since in the
hope transporting myself back to that show.
— Jacob Stolworthy
Run the Jewels, ‘Legend Has It’
Proof
that I am incredibly susceptible to earworms. If you’re wondering why a
track for a 2016 album is being featured here, it’s for the simple and
straightforward reason that, as a movie fan, I naturally watched the Black Panther trailer about 20 times then got the track stuck in my head for about three months. It’s a killer, though.
— Clarisse Loughrey
Tom Petty, ‘Wildflowers’
I
started playing this track pretty much on loop after watching Tom Petty
and the Heartbreakers at their Hyde Park gig in July. I hadn’t paid the
Wildflowers album much attention before the gig, leaning more
towards the Heartbreakers’ traditional American rock sound, over the
gentle folk of Petty’s solo work on Wildflowers. But Petty played
several tracks off of this album at the gig and I fell in love with
them. The chorus speaks to me as a frustrated country girl who still
finds it strange to be among the concrete: “You belong among the
wildflowers, you belong in a boat out at sea. Sail away, kill off the
hours, you belong somewhere you feel free.”
— Chloe Hubbard
Virginia to Vegas, ‘Selfish’
I
was surprised by this one as it’s been months since I last listened to
it, but going back to it I get why I had it on repeat so much in 2017.
Canadian artist Virginia to Vegas pre-empted the “subdued banger” that
would go on to dominate the charts in the later part of this year. I
don’t even remember where I heard it first — I think it might have been a
viral track on Spotify, but it’s annoyingly addictive — the 8m streams
its racked up on Spotify definitely weren’t all by me. I’ve noticed a
lot of the tracks that popped up in my Spotify end-of-year list were
either old favourites or pop bangers that I’d play about a hundred times
in a week before moving on.
— Roisin O’Connor
Brockhampton, ‘Sweet’
Brockhampton
was the best artist I discovered in 2017. They're often favourably
compared to Odd Future, which I don't really see, but this song kind of
has an 'Oldie' vibe to it. Six members of the self-described 'boy band'
exchange verses but it's Joba who really shines with his strange,
mangled, addictive bars. "I am one with ebb and flow, that's all I
know"; I think it tops my list directly as a result of that bit alone.
— Ibrahim Salha
Maleek Berry, ‘Bend It’
This
track is entirely unexpectedly because I only started listening to it
about three weeks ago. Still, it’s perfect as winter approaches: so fun
and sunny that it can even divert the path of cold, British winds; the
sheer warmth of it stopping them ripping all the way through to your
bones. Those aren’t usually things I especially want from music but this
has been a really useful track for stopping me being quite such a
goth.
— Andrew Griffin
Ed Sheeran, ‘Nancy Mulligan’
I
was rather surprised that out of the staggering 19,474 minutes I spent
listening to Spotify this year most of them were spent internally jiving
along to this jolly Irish-jig number. As an avid subscriber to the “I’m
too cool to listen to chart music” narrative, I might like Ed Sheeran
more than I care to admit. Yes, he’s one of the best-selling artists in
the world and yes his music is overplayed absolutely everywhere, but
there’s just something about this particular tune, which tells the
charming story of how his grandparents met, that evidently kept me
coming back for more.
— Olivia Petter
The Rubberbandits, ‘Horse Outside’
My
most listened to tune comes from The Rubberbandits, ‘Horse Outside’
being the Limerick duo's tale of Magner's weddings, equine supremacy and
car-related one-upmanship. Hilarious, catchy and a great advertisement
for horses as a way of avoiding road tax, it livened up the morning
commute countless times, much to the bemusement of onlooking fellow
passengers as I stamped my hoof in time to the beat. Giddy up.
— Ronan O'Shea
(Sandy) Alex G, ‘Bobby’
Rocket,
the latest album from Frank Ocean's Blonde collaborator Alex G, was my
go-to this year for those
staring-out-of-a-bus-window-feeling-down-on-your-luck moments. In
particular, the track 'Bobby' set up shop in my heart, a burnt-out folk
rock song based around weary harmonies and lackadaisical violin and
banjo. As if pleading to his lover, the narrator reworks the wounding
chorus line to address his mistakes. "I'd leave him for you," he says of
his personified demons. "I'd clean it for you," he assures of the mess
he's made. But is he trying to change more than he should need to? Has
he been worn weak by the relationship? "I'd burn them for you" he later
says of the pictures of his heart turning dark he's been painting,
promising to mask his own valid sorrow just to keep her around. A
completely moreish track that's at once brutal and slender.
— Christopher Hooton
Frank Ocean, ‘Chanel’
One
of Frank Ocean’s many loosies, ‘Chanel’ marks one of the elusive
songwriter’s best tracks: a subdued, catchy, slow-burner with lyrics
that walk a careful tightrope between bravado and emotional. Before
seeing Ocean play Lovebox, the track — along with ‘Biking’ and ‘Nights’ —
was played on repeat. Unfortunately, the actual concert couldn’t match
my expectations, but the former Odd Future member remains one of my
favourite artists working today.
— Jack Shepherd