Alexandra P

Why did Spotify Wrapped never happen for concerts?

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Spotify completely changed how people think about listening history.

Wrapped turned music consumption into something emotional, social and deeply personal. People don’t just share stats — they share identity, memories and parts of their life story.

But I’ve always felt that live music is even more emotional than streaming.

Concerts are tied to real moments:

  • specific summers

  • friendships

  • relationships

  • cities

  • festival weekends

  • phases of life

I can instantly remember where I was in life through certain concerts.

Yet digitally, those memories still feel completely fragmented.

Ticket PDFs disappear in emails.
Photos are buried in cloud storage.
Videos get lost in camera rolls.
You forget support acts, festival lineups or even who you attended certain shows with.

Most existing concert platforms still feel very database-first:
log a show, save a date, move on.

But I think the real opportunity is much bigger.

Imagine if a modern live music platform could actually turn your concert history into a living social memory experience:

  • your yearly Concert Wrapped

  • top artists seen live

  • cities and venues visited most

  • festival history across years

  • your favorite concert eras

  • people you attended the most concerts with

  • photos and videos connected to specific shows

  • photographers and creators attached to events

  • timelines of your live music life

  • discovering overlapping concert histories with friends

Something that feels less like a spreadsheet — and more like a digital identity built around live music culture.

Curious how others think about this.

Do you feel live music deserves its own “Letterboxd + Spotify Wrapped” type platform?

We’re launching Gigvault on Monday on Product Hunt — would genuinely love your thoughts and feedback.

More details: Gigvault

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