Three artists see surge in streams after deaths

Following the recent deaths of Yeison Jiménez, Willie Colón, and Billy Steinberg, their musical works have seen a notable increase in streams on digital platforms. This phenomenon highlights how an artist's passing can boost public attention to their legacy. Data shows significant growth in streams and followers on services like Spotify and YouTube.

The music world often experiences a resurgence in an artist's popularity after their death, a pattern evident in the recent cases of Yeison Jiménez, Willie Colón, and Billy Steinberg.

Yeison Jiménez, a Colombian popular music singer, died on January 3. According to Soundcharts data, equivalent reproductions of his music rose 888%, exceeding 3.200 million streams. On streaming platforms, both premium and ad-supported listens grew over 1,000%, reaching 80.6 million.

Willie Colón, the Puerto Rican salsa musician, died on February 21. On Spotify, he reached 12.6 million monthly listeners, with his biggest recent spike right after the news. On February 23, he gained over 20,490 followers on the platform. That day, he added 6,000 YouTube subscribers, 2,953 on Instagram, 1,315 on X, and 282 on Deezer. On YouTube, daily views jumped from an average near two million to ten million.

Billy Steinberg, the American songwriter known for hits like Madonna's 'Like a Virgin' and Cyndi Lauper's 'True Colors', died a week ago. On Spotify, Bogotá ranks as the 15th city listening most to 'Like a Virgin' and 24th for 'True Colors'.

These increases illustrate a common trend in the music industry, where an artist's death generates renewed interest in their catalog.

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