

If you don't listen to any artists in a certain level of popularity, the level will just show up blank - so you might want to work on diversifying your music taste before you share. But if you listen to a lot of Antichrist Siege Machine, they'll be closer to the bottom. For instance, if you listen to a lot of Ed Sheeran, he'll go into the top iceberg level because he's one of the most popular artists out there. It looks at those top artists and organizes them by their popularity or obscurity, and then pops them into an iceberg category. So the artists on your chart might be musicians you haven't listened to in a few months, or maybe are bands you've only just started listening to now. Icebergify collects data from your top 50 artists in your short-term, medium-term, and long-term listening trends, according to Icebergify. It's the latest viral Spotify tool following closely behind the Spotify Pie chart that picked up a lot of attention earlier this month. Icebergify is a tool that shows all of your favorite artists on Spotify in a chart that looks a lot like - you guessed it - an iceberg. That's the question everyone on my Instagram and Twitter appears to be trying to answer with a new way Spotify listeners can analyze their music. How deep does the iceberg of your music taste go?
