The clusters seen on the previous picture almost fully disappeared. We can take inspiration from the dithering algorithms to solve our problem with clusters of songs by the same artist; we will try to spread them throughout the whole playlist. Suppose we have a playlist containing some songs by The White Stripes, The xx, Bonobo, Britney Spears (Toxic!) and Jaga Jazzist. For each artist we take their songs and try to stretch them as evenly as possible along the whole playlist. Then we collect all songs and order them by their position. A picture is better than a thousand words.

Sometimes the record label of a song can not only remove the song from Spotify, but upload a newer version of the song in place of the old version. This way the old song will not be visible in the playlists anymore. You can check this by searching for the songs removed from your playlist in the Spotify library. If this is the case indeed, you'll be able to find the new versions via the Search.


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Can you let us know when exactly the songs have disappeared from your Liked Songs, and if they were songs from the same artists or time period? The more info about this you can give is the more we can help.

Some songs do get removed from the Spotify library due to licensing issues and they might appear grayed out or get removed completely. There are occasions when these songs get added back to the Spotify library under the same title/ year, but sometimes they get re-uploaded as other versions of the song with new metadata and new "Date Added".

I've realized that I haven't found any new artists or any new music, and just continuously listen to the same things over and over again which is quite depressing. The point of the song radio or at least how I use it is to discover new artists that are in the same realm of the artist I'm listening to, and I think you all at Spotify are putting everyone - artist AND listener - at a huge detrimental disadvantage by having it go that way because then there is no discovery for new artists and there is no way for listeners to get into new music without scouring the platform instead of giving good recommendations based off your algorithm. More than anything I want to be able to discover new artists based off song radio, not just hear the same songs I've been listening to. If I wanted to listen to those songs, I would just continue to listen to them. Especially since maybe when I start a song radio off something that is midwest-emo/indie, it'll still play hyperpop/rap in the same playlist which are two completely different genre's and moods.

Just to make sure we are on the same page, could you give us more information about it? When you reach the end of a playlist or album, if it's activated, Spotify will start to play some similar songs to what you were listening to before. It's expected that it does not play the same song you had already listened to on your playlist, for instance. Is it happening to you when playing the 'Auto Play' feature? Let us know and give us more details.

A few updates ago, after any user created playlist that I was listening to finished, and assuming I have "Autoplay" turned on in my options, the queue order would jump immediately to "Recommended Songs - Based on the songs in this playlist" and start playing from the top.

Recently, however, a new update switched this turn order. Now, after any user created playlist ends, it instead jumps to what's called "Radio." The problem is, this "Radio" generates roughly the SAME tracks every single time I'm finished with my playlist. For example, after my metal playlist ends, instead of finding new music, I end up hearing the same songs that I've already heard or liked.

I'm not sure why, but this "Play Queue" isn't random each time like the "Recommended songs - Based on the songs in this playlist" is. That major difference is one leads to way more discovery than the other, and I have to manually click the first song of the Recommended playlist to start that queue.

You mentioned that after your playlist, Spotify starts to play the queue with the exact same songs you've heard before, right? This way, I suggest, first of all, that you check if your queue is empty before you set to play a playlist. You can get the step-by-step in managing your queue here. Once your queue is empty, try to play a playlist and check what happens when all the songs on the playlist finish...

And there are some other things I'd like to make clear. "Recommended Songs" is just a list of tracks that is suggested by Spotify to be added to the playlist, basing on the songs that are already added.

The function "Autoplay" is what starts to play similar songs when your playlist finishes. You can get more information about this feature here. I suggest that you check if it is enabled on your Spotify settings.

The difference is this 'Radio' actually plays the same songs that I've already liked or heard before every time. 'Recommended Songs' was a fresh set of songs. This was great for driving or playing video games because I did not have to manually start the 'Recommended songs' list myself.

hi all so I done the new update on my phone and I went back onto Spotify and I went to my liked songs folder and all the songs have gone but folder still there ? Anyone able to help how I can get it all back without putting them all back myself ?

Hi, I'm using a laptop, Windows 10. I have just logged back in, and the "liked songs" folder was there, bu it was empty. But the weird part is, the playlist (liked songs) is there on the web player, and my tablet. I have attached two screenshots, one of which, is the app itself, which shows no liked songs, whereas in the web player, it shows all my liked songs. Please answer quickly! 

Thanks.

I want to be able to play different songs on different Google minis in different rooms. I have created a Spotify family account where all family members have different Spotify accounts under the plan. But the minis seem linked in Google Home and won't allow separate songs to be played. I removed one device from my Google home and had my wife manage it from her Google home but still we can't play two different songs. Please help this is driving mad and shouldn't be this hard as must be a common scenario with kids in different rooms etc.

I have now finally sorted this. As stated above I had to set up separate Google and Spotify accounts (which is part of family premium plan). But importantly I had to factory reset one Google mini and then link that to an account other than mine (I used my wifes). So effectively one of our kids bedroom speakers is linked to mine and another to my wife's. They can both now play two different songs at the same time! All under the same Spotify family plan account. I can't believe how convoluted this was. Would expect this to be pretty common with kids having different music tastes. When my kids are past 13 and can have Google and Spotify accounts that don't appear under my Family Account app, then I guess we'll do this all again so speakers are linked to them individually with their playlists etc.

I have removed the "liked" status of many longs that are in my liked songs playlist. I do this by unchecking the heart status that is highlighted as "liked". I've been removing many for awhile while listening to my "Liked songs" playlist from my library. On the screen it will pop up and say "Removed from Liked Songs but I still get a lot of previous songs that were "unhearted" still playing in the Liked playlist. The songs heart is not highlighted so it's not liked anymore but still plays when I use the liked songs playlist. I've got so many I unchecked the "like" status mostly because I was tired of hearing them but they continue to be in my liked playlist. Frustrating and why doesn't remove them like the pop-up says it does?

Spotify offers digital copyright restricted recorded audio content, including more than 100 million songs and five million podcasts, from record labels and media companies.[8] As a freemium service, basic features are free with advertisements and limited control, while additional features, such as offline listening and commercial-free listening, are offered via paid subscriptions. Users can search for music based on artist, album, or genre, and can create, edit, and share playlists.

Unlike physical or download sales, which pay artists a fixed price per song or album sold, Spotify pays royalties based on the number of artist streams as a proportion of total songs streamed. It distributes approximately 70% of its total revenue to rights holders (often record labels), who then pay artists based on individual agreements.[14] While certain musicians have voiced objections to Spotify's royalty structure and its effect on record sales, others laud the service for offering a lawful option to combat piracy and for remunerating artists each time their music is played.[15]

In March 2017, Spotify acquired Sonalytic, an audio detection startup, for an undisclosed amount of money. Spotify stated that Sonalytic would be used to improve the company's personalized playlists, better match songs with compositions, and improve the company's publishing data system.[73] Later that month, Spotify also acquired MightyTV, an app connected to television streaming services, including Netflix and HBO Go, that recommends content to users. Spotify intended to use MightyTV to improve its advertising efforts on the free tier of service.[74] In April 2017, they acquired Mediachain, a blockchain startup that had been developing a decentralized database system for managing attribution, and other metadata for media.[75][76] This was followed in May 2017 with the acquisition of artificial intelligence startup Niland, which uses technology to improve personalisation and recommendation features for users.[77][78] In November 2017, Spotify acquired Soundtrap, an online music studio startup.[79][80] ff782bc1db

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