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The Guardian

May 3, 2026

Spotify has ruined mood playlists – so our critics have made some better ones instead
The Guardianby Alexis Petridis, Jude Rogers, Laura Barton, Jason Okundaye, Ammar Kalia·May 3, 2026

Spotify has ruined mood playlists – so our critics have made some better ones instead

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Political leancenter
Source quality48/100
Factual ratio17/100
Framing18/100

Music might be the greatest mood enhancer in the world: it’s certainly hard to think of another art form that can so effectively tip a feeling of happiness into euphoria or create a suitably gloomy space in which to wallow in melancholy. There have always been albums designed to evoke a certain mood, from Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely to Essential Chill Out Vol 2. But in recent years, we seem to have become more interested in the relationship between music and mood. Streaming services are thick with mood-based playlists. There appear to be hundreds of the things on Spotify, from the straightforward (Happy Vibes) to the vague (All the Feels), and they appear to have struck a nerve: Spotify’s own curated mood playlists are now vastly outnumbered by user-generated ones, soundtracking everything from Friday at the Office to – I swear I’m not making this up – Losing Someone to Suicide.There are those who have detected something sinister in all this. Liz Pelly’s 2025 book Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist suggests that the Spotify’s seeming obsession with mood-based playlists is linked to its focus on what it calls “lean-back

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Lean: 0.000 · Source quality 48/100 · Factual vs opinion 17/100.

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Political lean

Political leancenterSource quality48/100Factual ratio17/100Framing18/100

Methodology

v2-canonical
100
Source diversity
across 1 outlet
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