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Spotify reports growing surge of non-English pop music on global chart

March 12, 2026 2 views
Entertainment
Spotify reports growing surge of non-English pop music on global chart
NewsMusic News Spotify reports growing surge of non-English pop music on global chart Bad Bunny, BLACKPINK, Huntr/x, Rosalía and more have all helped turn the tide By Liberty Dunworth 12th March 2026 Rosalía performs on stage during The BRIT Awards 2026. CREDIT: JMEnternational/Getty Images Spotify has reported a growing surge of non-English pop music that is making its way onto the global chart. READ MORE: Rosalía – ‘Lux’ review: an arresting album of astonishing scope and ambition The streaming giant has shared that last year, there were songs in 16 different languages that made their way onto its Global Top 50 last year (as per The Times). This is double what that figure was in 2020, and languages included Korean, Spanish, Arabic, Indonesian, Turkish and Portuguese. Advertisement It also added that the Brazilian Funk genre was the fastest growing world wide, with its audience increasing by 36 per cent over the past five years. K-pop has also seen a noticeable increase since then, as has Trap Latino, which have gone up by 31 per cent and 29 per cent respectively. Globally, 14 of last year’s Top 20 best selling albums were sung exclusively in English, as reported by IFPI, however, the list did see a growing number of artists who don’t sing in English, including K-pop Groups Enhypen, Stray Kids, and Seventeen. Last week alone, the most-played chart on Spotify included multiple songs that weren’t predominantly in English either, with entries from Bad Bunny, Tyla, Tems, Peso Pluma, Jung Kook and Jin, BLACKPINK, Rauw Alejandro and more. The UK chart, however, only featured two songs that were not exclusively in English for its Biggest Selling Songs of 2025 list – ‘APT.’ by Rosé & Bruno Mars, and ‘Golden’ from the K-pop Demon Hunters soundtrack, performed by Huntr/x. BBC News reports that the trend has been growing since 2017 – the same year when streaming overtook physical media to become the biggest source of income in the music industry. Recommended The trend is looking likely to continue growing further into 2026 too, thanks in part to the new EP from BLACKPINK, the unforgettable Super Bowl halftime show from Bad Bunny, an upcoming stadium tour from the newly-reformed BTS, and Rosalía’s captivating performance at the BRITs. The latter saw her bring out Bjork as a special guest, and perform songs from her hit album ‘LUX’, which saw her sing in 13 different languages. ‘Lux’ was given a glowing five-star review by NME, who lauded its “astonishing scope and ambition”. It was also named on the best albums of the year list by NME, while ‘Reliquia’ from the album landed at Number Seven on our 50 best songs of 2025 list. The singer has a huge 2026 world tour on the way, which includes dates in the UK, Europe and North America in the coming months. See all of the dates here and find any remaining tickets here. Advertisement Rosalía previously discussed singing in different languages and going outside of her comfort zone by doing so, saying she is the “opposite” of Bad Bunny in that way. Since then, she has defended her stance, and said that the comments were taken “out of context” when implied that she was pitting herself against the Puerto Rican star. Related TopicsBad BunnyBLACKPINKBTSDanceENHYPENFunkK-popPeso PlumaPopReggaeReggaetonRosaliaSeventeenTemsTyla You May Also Like Advertisement TRENDING Kim Gordon – ‘Play Me’ review: the godmother of alt-rock fearlessly turns to beats Dive into I Promised The World’s crowd catharsis: “Don’t just stand there, it’s a hardcore show” Mandy, Indiana’s speaker-blowing noise-punk is here to galvanise The Kooks to play The Great Escape 20th anniversary show presented by NME The biggest video game concerts you can’t miss in 2026 Advertisement More Stories Music News Here’s what went down at the ‘Trans Mission’ Wembley gig, with Wolf Alice, Adam Lambert and more Music News Robyn shares “very punk” new single ‘Blow My Mind’, in tribute to her son Music News The Pussycat Dolls announce world comeback tour, share new single ‘Club Song’ Film News Billie Eilish in talks for film acting debut in Sarah Polley’s adaptation of ‘The Bell Jar’ Music News Sombr calls Brixton Academy “the most poorly managed venue I’ve ever played at in my life” Music News Lighting rig collapses on fans during Max Dean DJ set, injuring 15 people