Hozier and Pantera are dominating gardening playlists
Hozier and Pantera are among the artists proving popular with gardeners.
According to a new study by First Saturday Lime Study which dug into the intersection of music and gardening, both the Irish singer-songwriter and US heavy metal band dominate Spotify gardening playlists as the most featured artists.
The study analysed over 76,000 songs from Spotify playlists and surveyed 1,000 Americans before discovering some surprise revelations.
Hozier’s ‘Too Sweet’ was the top song to feature on gardening playlists, followed by ‘Here Comes The Sun’ by The Beatles and ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ by Chappell Roan.
Zach Bryan, Morgan Wallen and Luke Combs, meanwhile, were the top artists appearing on homesteading – meaning someone who lives self-sufficiently, usually by growing their own food – playlists on Spotify.
But it was Noah Kahan‘s ‘Stick Season’ that came out as the top song on homesteading playlists.
Among other findings was that 62 per cent of gardeners and homesteaders listen to music while doing so, while 56 said that listening to metal while gardening actually helps to reduces stress.
However listening to heavy metal apparently does come with some potential risks, with one finding revealing that 20 per cent of people who listen to that genre of music while gardening accidentally kill their plants.
Similarly, nearly one in four people who listen to EDM while gardening (23 per cent) reported a low yield of crops.
Elsewhere, it was rap/hip-hop and pop that came out as the top genres on gardening playlists on Spotify, while country and pop came out on top for homesteading playlists.
As for the song of the summer among gardeners and homesteaders, Kendrick Lamar‘s ‘Not Like Us’ secured that honour.
Another recent study found that metal proved popular during another pastime, with Deftones being revealed as the most popular metal band during sex, while Nine Inch Nails ranked top among BDSM enthusiasts.
The post Hozier and Pantera are dominating gardening playlists appeared first on NME.
Hollie Geraghty
NME