The many expected album Taylor Swift the Life of A Showgirl lived at midnight on Friday, and within minutes the stunning rush of listeners reportedly left Spotify who tried to stay online.
Swifties will amaze Spotify with a traffic increase
The 13-foot record, which ran hard before the release before the release, triggered an immediate increase in operation, because fans known as Swifties, threw itself on the streaming of the songs. According to the tracker dowder failure, more than a thousand users reported problems because the platform froze, crashed or could not load. During the top rush, mobile and desktop users around the world were affected.
Spotify intensified the madness by promoting the album on its official X account and encouraged fans to tune in when it fell. However, the net volume of the current login has proven too large for the service and many users remained frustrated when they tried to play songs in the early hours.
Swift announced the arrival of the Instagram album and called it a deeply personal project. “I can’t tell you how proud I am to share it with you, an album that just feels so good,” she wrote, thanking long -term collaborators Max Martin and Shellback for helping to revive her vision. She added, “If you thought the big show was wild, you should come and look behind the curtain … The life of Showgirl is out now.”
The disruption took only a short time for Spotify stabilized, but the accident emphasized the intensity of demand whenever Swift reveals new music. All 13 songs from the album quickly climbed to trend charts as soon as normal streaming renewed and reaffirmed its status of one of the most influential characters in the current pop.
(This is an evolving story; check out the next updates later)
(Tagstotranslate) Taylor Swift
