Halfway through the year, a few music trends have become apparent: Global music streams are up, Latin music has become the fastest growing streaming genre in the United States, and physical album variants — multiple releases of the same — are on the rise.
Going Global
The global music industry surpassed 1 trillion streams at the fastest pace, ever, in a calendar year, Luminate's 2024 Midyear Report has found. The number was reached 10 days faster than in 2023.
Global streams also increased 15.1% with 2.29 trillion on-demand audio streams, up from 1.99 trillion at this point last year.
The continued Latin music boom
People everywhere are streaming more music, and in the U.S., Latin music has become the fastest growing streaming genre, up 15.1% from this time last year. Latin music streaming also leans the most current — 35% of all Latin streams in the U.S. are for albums released in the last 18 months. Compare that to rock music, where 70.5% of streams in the U.S. are from deep catalogs — releases that are 5 years old, or older.
There are no Latin artists featured in the top 10 albums or songs of the year to date, but Bad Bunny, Peso Pluma, Fuera Regida, Karol G, Rauw Alejandro, Aventura, Carín León are among the top 200 most streamed artists in the U.S. for the first half of 2024.
Last year, Latin music was among the top three fastest growing genres in the U.S., says Jaime Marconette, Luminate's vice president of music insights and industry relations. The 2024 figures illustrate a continuation in that trend.