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if you think That in-store Christmas playlist If you have started earlier than ever, you are not alone, and you are not wrong.
New data shows that people are Get into the festive mood earlier than ever this yearAnd also playing more Christmas music.
14 Holiday Songs for December 1st, 2019 Included in Spotify’s top 50 songs According to statistics, on this day this year the number in America was 30. graph about songs,
However, the transition to more Christmas tunes began earlier this year. The site notes that since November 1, five celebration songs made their way into Spotify’s top 200 most played songs.
As usual, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas” – heralded as the annual harbinger of the Christmas period – made its way onto the list early.
This year, according to Graphs About Songs, she joined Brenda Lee’s “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree”, Wham’s “Last Christmas”, Bobby Helms’s “Jingle Bell Rock” and Ariana Grande’s 2014 song “Santa Tell Me”.
By the second week of November, 14 Christmas tunes were in Spotify’s top 200, compared to only three in 2022.
Holiday music “helps people feel part of the collective and makes them feel good,” explained Spotify editorial head Talia Crains, whose role includes curating North American Christmas playlists. wall street journal,
In fact, the only non-Christmas songs to compete with the festive spirit and make Spotify’s top 25 as of December 10 are industry stalwarts including Taylor Swift, “The Fate of Ophelia” and “Golden” from the hit Netflix film “K-pop Demon Hunters.”
Cranes told The Journal The “first big surge” in holiday-song streaming occurs on September 1 (although hardcore fans start in August), and activity continues to increase month after month from then until the big day.
He said holiday playlist creation in the US has increased by 60 percent year over year from October 2024 to October 2025.
“The traditions of the holiday season, especially music, provide us with an emotional anchor in the face of rising costs, a volatile job market, political conflict at home and war abroad,” said Matt Bailey, founder of music analytics company Hit Momentum. The Journal.
Bailey suggests this trend is true in all times of stress, highlighting that Christmas music streaming increased during the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020.