

went live as a test product, offering presale tickets to a small number of upcoming events, including performances by Limbeck, Annie DiRusso, Dirty Honey, Crows, TOKiMONSTA, Four Year Strong, and Osees. Spotify will also bring attention to the shows by emailing out personalized virtual event recommendations based on listening habits and Spotify’s recommendation algorithms.įor more information on the Spotify for artists features click here, or to learn more about how to find your favorite artist’s virtual concerts click here.Spotify quietly launched a new pilot program this week, bringing direct sale live event tickets to a limited number of events for its users. It will also be easier for fans to find these events, as artists can make the upcoming virtual concert their “Artist Pick” so it shows up on the landing page of their artist profile.

As long as the shows are listed through Songkick or Ticketmaster, artists will be able to integrate event listings for virtual concerts on a variety of platforms-Facebook Live, Twitch, YouTube Live, Instagram Live, a dedicated website, or their method of choice. In a press release, the streaming service noted that concerts cannot be directly uploaded to the profile, and must be done through Songkick. Through Spotify’s partnerships with Songkick and Ticketmaster, artists’ virtual events will be automatically uploaded to the Concerts tab on their artist profiles.

Related: Live For Live Streams: What’s Playing On Our Facebook Page Now, fans will be able to see every livestream event listed on an artist’s Spotify page as virtual events remain the new normal. Informed by the concert data aggregator Songkick, these tabs have been desolate since the global pandemic ravaged the concert industry back in March. Previously, users were able to go to an artist’s page, click the “Concerts” tab, and see where the artist would be playing over the next several months. Today, Spotify joins those ranks as the streaming service has announced that virtual events will now be included on artist profiles.

Whether that be artists making home recordings, venues pivoting to socially distanced concerts, or the ubiquitous prevalence of livestreams, everyone has had to change things up a bit. As the landscape of live music remains a shell of its former self, everyone has to get with the times.
