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Study: Music Streaming Services Are Killing Instrumental Intros

A new study reveals that songs are getting shorter to accommodate people's diminishing attention spans, and music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora may be to blame.

By Angela Moscaritolo
Updated April 12, 2017
Spotify Tips

Long, drawn out musical intros? Aint nobody got time for that!

A new study reveals that songs are getting shorter to accommodate people's diminishing attention spans, and music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora may be to blame.

Hubert Léveillé Gauvin, a doctoral student in music theory at The Ohio State University, spent months listening to and analyzing songs that reached the top 10 from 1986 to 2015 and found "a dramatic shift away from long intros" and a "marked increase in tempo," according to a news release from the school.

In the mid-80s, song intros averaged more than 20 seconds. Today? Artists are taking just 5 seconds, on average, to get to the lyrics. At the same time, the average song tempo has increased by about 8 percent.

Léveillé Gauvin also found that song titles themselves are shorter than they used to be, often just a single word.

The researcher believes that Spotify ($0.00 at Apple.com) and Pandora , both of which make it easy to abandon a track and skip to something new, are fueling this shift. His theory: Artists today are getting straight to the point to grab your attention before you skip to something else.

"It's survival-of-the-fittest: Songs that manage to grab and sustain listeners' attention get played and others get skipped," Léveillé Gauvin said in a statement. "There's always another song. If people can skip so easily and at no cost, you have to do something to grab their attention."

These days, he says, artists and producers are more concerned about packing concert venues than creating "cultural products" with their jams. "Your product isn't necessarily your song, it's your personal brand," he said. "We're operating in an attention economy, and attention is scarce and valuable."

A Conversation with Pandora's VP of Product, Chris Becherer
PCMag Logo A Conversation with Pandora's VP of Product, Chris Becherer

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About Angela Moscaritolo

Managing Editor, Consumer Electronics

I'm PCMag's managing editor for consumer electronics, overseeing an experienced team of analysts covering smart home, home entertainment, wearables, fitness and health tech, and various other product categories. I have been with PCMag for more than 10 years, and in that time have written more than 6,000 articles and reviews for the site. I previously served as an analyst focused on smart home and wearable devices, and before that I was a reporter covering consumer tech news. I'm also a yoga instructor, and have been actively teaching group and private classes for nearly a decade. 

Prior to joining PCMag, I was a reporter for SC Magazine, focusing on hackers and computer security. I earned a BS in journalism from West Virginia University, and started my career writing for newspapers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.

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