Climatune provides listeners with local playlists based on weather moods in their city using the most accurate, most comprehensive global weather data from AccuWeather.
AccuWeather Global Weather Center – February 7, 2017 – AccuWeather, the global leader in weather information and digital media, today announced it has partnered with the music streaming service, Spotify, on a new site titled Climatune. Climatune was created by AccuWeather and Spotify to give music fans around the world insights into how the weather around them affects the music they listen to everyday, providing the perfect musical score for any weather.
Through a yearlong study comparing 85 billion anonymized streams on Spotify in over 900 cities nationwide, AccuWeather and Spotify analyzed the impact weather has on the music people listen to. Conclusions included:
AccuWeather Global Weather Center – February 7, 2017 – AccuWeather, the global leader in weather information and digital media, today announced it has partnered with the music streaming service, Spotify, on a new site titled Climatune. Climatune was created by AccuWeather and Spotify to give music fans around the world insights into how the weather around them affects the music they listen to everyday, providing the perfect musical score for any weather.
Through a yearlong study comparing 85 billion anonymized streams on Spotify in over 900 cities nationwide, AccuWeather and Spotify analyzed the impact weather has on the music people listen to. Conclusions included:
- Sunny days typically encourage listening to happier and higher-energy music.
- Rainy days bring lower-energy, sadder-sounding music with more acoustic vs. electronic sounds.
- Snowy days encourage more instrumental music.
- New York City and Philadelphia listeners are the most affected by bad weather; with residents of these cities substantially changing their listening when it rains.
- Chicagoans get excited by the rain and stream happier music.
- Miami and Seattle listeners buck the trend and listen to more energetic music on cloudy days.
- San Franciscans, on the other hand, seem saddest on cloudy days.
- Houston responds the most strongly to rain, with acoustic listening increasing by 121 percent when it rains.
