It is planning to extend the roll out to more countries in the future, as well as launch an Android app. The social network says that that the placeholder website is slowly going live in the US, Canada, the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand today (the iOS app is already in the App Store). When searching for music in the app, users will be able to hear short previews from iTunes by default, although Spotify and Rdio users will be able to link their accounts to listen to entire tracks. The music discover app currently includes songs from iTunes, as well as streaming music services Spotify and Rdio, although Twitter says it plans to increase the number of providers in the future. It also suggests artists and music you may like based on what you’ve been tweeting and who you’ve been interacting with, and allows you to follow new artists from inside the app. The #nowplaying hashtag is going to become even bigger, as the app lets you see who’s been tweeting about listening to specific songs and artists using the hashtag. The #music app shifts the focus to artists, allowing fans to see what musicians their favourite stars follow, as well as listen to music and share it to Twitter within the app. The app was designed by the team behind We Are Hunted, the music startup Twitter acquired last year. In fact, it looks perfect.The social network announced that its much-rumoured new offering, which is being rolled out today on the web and as an iOS app, is designed to use your Twitter activity to “detect and surface the most popular tracks and emerging artists” you may find interesting. We’d act surprised about the top artists, and post on social media. Every year, a Spotify Wrapped comes along and we all get to see who and which songs we just can’t stop listening to. And the listening to music meme lives on for years. The Spotify Wrapped memes are in, and you’ll appreciate them as much as you try to not get RuPaul on your Top Artists Wrapped. The more it is shared, the more people become aware of the brand. That is, brands can produce content that has the potential to become a meme in and of itself. You can also make your music meme-worthy content. Does anything look wrong about MJ jamming out to "Levels" by Avicii? No. Listening to Music Meme Can be Applied to Marketing. We don't know what kind of music Michael Jordan likes (though there have been rumors that he's denied that he doesn't like rap/hip-hop music), but it's easy to imagine him jamming out to just about anything once we're given visual evidence. From the very on-brand choice of "Jumpman" by Future and Drake, to the unexpected, like "Sk8r Boi" by Avril Lavigne, this account has taken little time to absolutely explode.Īnd honestly? It works. But this new account has just decided to imagine What If.? By taking that same MJ dancing clip from The Last Dance, and superimposing various different songs over it (all of which work to just about perfection, we might add), we've got a whole new layer of fun. We knew that the music in The Last Dancewas already incredible. The internet clearly had other plans with this clip, and a new Twitter account called has taken things to a new level. On October 2nd, YouTuber Mjj67 posted a video where Squidward listens to Guts' Theme, gaining over 12,200 views in over a year (shown below, left). He'd tell the camera crew who he's actually listening to-R&B artist Kenny Lattimore-but we live in 2020. On June 4th, Twitter 12 user ciutchs posted a meme using the crying image, gaining over 65,000 likes and 42,000 retweets in a similar span of time (shown below, right).
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