
YouTube Music, Apple Music, Spotify, and other music streaming services released their end-of-year recaps in December, and it’s always interesting for music lovers to look back and see which songs, albums, artists, and genres rose to the top. Interesting … and sometimes not as expected.
In my case, 2025 was a curious year for music, as it was skewed dramatically by a few unplanned forays into older music and me dividing my time between YouTube Music and Apple Music. I still prefer YouTube Music overall, but both have unique qualities I like. For example, YouTube Music lets you add individual YouTube videos as music tracks to playlists, which I love. And Apple Music is interesting for its spatial audio and lossless capabilities, plus it obviously works well with Apple mobile devices, Macs, and AirPods.
As for the music itself, I think it’s well understood that it gets more difficult to find new music as you get older. I’ve tried to buck this trend by finding new music in bars, restaurants, and even Uber rides and secreting them away using Shazam or the built-in music discovery feature built into Pixel phones. And in 2025, I did add dozens of new songs–music that was either literally new or at least new to us–to my playlists.
For this reason, I feel like I’m probably better at this than most people my age. But looking over the releases I listened to the most this year, it’s nostalgia that stands out the most. Three of my favorite albums from 2025 are either live recordings from legacy rock bands or anthologies. They are:
This trend continues with individual songs, of course, though there is a higher percentage of new (or new to me) music there, of course. The top 10 songs from last year (in YouTube Music) consist of a mix of older acts and a few Spanish language tracks, but none of it is literally new (released in the last year or two).
But I won’t bore you with all that when you can pretty much just listen to it. So here is this year’s playlist, Music Night 2025. It’s longer than last year’s version, 50 songs and about 3 hours long vs. 32 songs and 2 hours for Music Night 2024. It’s representative of what my wife and I listen to throughout the year, a mix of new, new to us, and old, and a mix of genres of styles.
I made this one in Spotify first, which is unusual for me as I prefer YouTube Music. But I often have trouble transferring playlists from YouTube Music to other services—I use SongShift for that—and I figured going from Spotify would be easier, with fewer manual tweaks. And it was, for Apple Music. But when I went to move the playlist to YouTube Music (really, YouTube in SongShift), 46 of the 50 songs had to be manually matched. And to videos, not songs. Sigh.
Anyway, it took a while. And the YouTube Music version of the playlist isn’t exactly the same as the other two because transferring playlists is a hard computer science problem, I guess. Ah well.
Music Night 2025 on Apple Music
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