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ago in General Factchecking by (160 points)

Yes, popular songs are generally getting shorter, and part of that is due to platforms like TikTok and streaming services driving the change. According to Billboard, TikTok and streaming “fragmentary moments” favour shorter tracks. The Washington Times reported that many artists are adapting to algorithms by trimming intros or making songs around the 2½-3 minute mark. However, it isn’t only TikTok: analyses say the trend also reflects changes in songwriting, listener habits, and how streaming counts are measured. So the claim is broadly correct: songs are shorter and TikTok plays a role, but it isn’t the sole cause.

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ago by Newbie (300 points)

Yes, popular songs nowadays are indeed getting shorter and shorter in length due to TikTok. According to The Washington Times, "Songs are becoming shorter as artists tailor their tracks to fit the algorithms of TikTok and Spotify, where quick hooks and replay-friendly formats drive plays and chart success." Songs used to reach the 4 or even 5-minute mark; however, now they are barely reaching 3 minutes. The popularity of TikTok audios that are trending only includes snippets of the song, making artists cut down the time greatly. The chorus is the "catchy part", so people are saying that TikTok has heavily impacted the way artists write songs.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/apr/14/songs-getting-shorter-thanks-part-spotify-tiktok-algorithms/

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ago by Newbie (300 points)

The claim is that popular songs are getting shorter because of TikTok, which is partly true but oversimplified. Research shows that it has become shorter on average over the last decade, but this trend started before TikTok. Platforms like TikTok have accelerated the change by rewording quick hooks and catchy segments that work well in short-form videos. TikTok is definitely one reason why songs are shorter, but not the sole reason. According to BBC, shorter songs are partly driven by streaming economics, and artists now design songs with instantly catchy intros to capture attention for people to use a portion of it for TikTok. Their data shows that, " the average Billboard Hot 100 song length fell from 4:12 in 1990 to about 3:00 in 2020". A stream counts after 30 seconds. This encourages quick hooks and reduces incentives for long intros/long songs. TikTok’s own report may emphasize its cultural influence to promote the platform, which is a potential corporate bias. Journalism sources like Billboard or BBC are more neutral but still reflect an industry-centered perspective that values reality and streaming success. TikTok’s format rewards short, catchy clips, which directly influence artists to make songs that are concise and hook-driven. Many viral hits like Olivia Rodrigo’s “Good 4 U” gained attention first through short TikTok clips, showing how song length and structure are shaped by the platform’s viral culture. Data from Quartz and PRS for Music show that song length had already been declining for years before TikTok existed, due to streaming behaviors and algorithmic playlisting. This means TikTok did influence but the trend, but did not create it. The cause is more complex, combining technology, audience behavior, and the economic design of streaming services. The claim is partly true that songs are shorter today, yet the trend began with streaming platforms, and TikTok simply accelerated it by rewarding brief, catchy hooks.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-052ab668-403d-416f-b5a6-c5692313b9b4

https://qz.com/1519823/is-spotify-making-songs-shorter?

Exaggerated/ Misleading
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ago by Newbie (260 points)
Yes, popular songs are becoming shorter to cater to the TikTok Algorithm. According to an article by the Washington Times, songs are becoming a hook that is created to circulate among trends. These days, songs are barely hitting the 3-minute mark. A 2020 report referenced in the article states that a hit song today averages two and a half minutes, half the amount of a hit song from the 90s. Spotify only pays artists if the listeners listens for more than 30 seconds, leading many artists to put the hook of the song at the start of it. By creating music that goes viral due to a hook and that keeps listeners entertained on streaming platforms, artists have cut down song intros compared to the past. The structure of Spotify, as well as the algorithm of TikTok, have influenced songwriters to create short, catchy songs that go viral on the social media platform. Another reasoning for these shorter songs, as addressed in a BBC research article, is the general attention span gifted by TikTok. TikTok has influenced and engineered society to have access to hundreds of pieces of content in a matter of minutes. Because of this, as a society, we have become accustomed to short form content and our attention on one thing only lasts a little while. Songs are suffering from this now too.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/apr/14/songs-getting-shorter-thanks-part-spotify-tiktok-algorithms/

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-052ab668-403d-416f-b5a6-c5692313b9b4
True
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ago by Newbie (310 points)

This claim originated from Reddit, which isn't really a valid source to begin with, considering anyone can post on the site but I decided to dive deeper to find out whether it was actually true or not. I found out that songs are getting shorter. According to an article I found by The Washington Post, the average song on is about 40 seconds shorter than it was in the early 2000s and is normally 2½ to 3 minutes long nowadays. TikTok does play a role in that, as viral moments on the app are short and ment to grab your attention, and artists need those clips to spread quicker. However, TikTok is not the only contributing factor. Other streaming services like Spotify also do their part in making shorter songs more profitable, as people can listen to them more often. My verdict is that this came is true and TikTok has helped speed up this trend of shortning songs, but the change was already happening because of the money aspect and peoples shortenings attention spans.

Sorces 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/interactive/2024/shorter-songs-again/

True
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ago by Newbie (300 points)

This is true, according to the chartmetric “the average Spotify charting song was around 3 minutes long—nearly 15 seconds shorter than in 2023 and 30 seconds shorter than in 2019.” The BBC added on to this by interviewing popular pop artist Pinkpanthers, who admitted that she would take out parts of songs so it wouldn’t get repetitive and have a more likely chance of going viral on apps like TikTok.

https://hmc.chartmetric.com/shorter-songs-trend-streaming-history/

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-052ab668-403d-416f-b5a6-c5692313b9b4

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ago by Newbie (300 points)

I looked into whether TikTok is making popular songs shorter and found that, while social media has changed how music is created, it’s a lot more complicated than it seems. According to the Bandcamp Diaries (2024), the average length of hit singles has gone down, with many tracks now running under three minutes, and sometimes even closer to two. This shift is tied to how looping videos work, shorter attention spans, and the way algorithms promote songs, quick songs tend to get replayed more often. However, a study from Startle, mentioned in the Northumberland Gazette (2025), shows that the average song length in 2024 is actually longer than in 1974, 3 minutes and 51 seconds compared to 3 minutes and 31 seconds. This suggests that TikTok's impact might not be as widespread as it looks. Sure, artists are shortening intros and putting catchy hooks up front to match the fast paced nature of TikTok, but the data reveals that not all music is getting simpler or shorter. All in all, TikTok has made songwriters focus on capturing attention quickly, but it doesn’t mean they’re giving up on depth or length.

The Bandcamp Diaries. (2024, February 12). Shorter songs, faster hooks: TikTok’s impact on song structure.

https://thebandcampdiaries.com/post/794800251360968704/shorter-songs-faster-hooks-tiktoks-impact-on 

Northumberland Gazette. (2025, May 1). Has music gotten shorter and less complex in recent years? https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/whats-on/arts-and-entertainment/tiktok-music-length-complexity-lyrics-not-shorter-5261212 

True
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ago by Newbie (300 points)

The idea that popular songs nowadays are shorter due to the rise of TikTok is highly defensible. The issue of attention span is what may first come to mind when you think of this topic. According to Keevee.com, multiple research studies have been run to try and determine each generation's average attention span. These studies have determined that Gen Z’s average attention span is only 6-8 seconds. This means that the average person from Gen Z can only focus on one thing at a time for 6 to 8 seconds before they feel the need to change topics or activities. This is in contrast to boomers, who have an attention span triple that of Gen Z, with an average span of 20 seconds. As technology has become easier to access, it has also become more troublesome to society. According to bulkoid.com, TikTok videos recorded in the app are often only 10 seconds at most. This has trained younger brains to be accustomed to quicker and smaller videos and bits of information.

https://bulkoid.com/

https://www.keevee.com/

True
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ago by Newbie (270 points)

This claim is mostly true, but it’s a little more complicated than just blaming TikTok. Data shows that popular songs have gotten shorter over time — the average Billboard Hot 100 song used to be over four minutes in the 1990s, and now it’s around three minutes. A lot of that has to do with how streaming services count plays and how people’s attention spans have changed. TikTok definitely plays a part since short, catchy parts of songs can go viral there, but it’s not the only reason. Other factors like the way music is written now, changes in genre styles, and how streaming rewards shorter tracks also matter.

Sources:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/interactive/2024/shorter-songs-again/ 

https://hmc.chartmetric.com/shorter-songs-trend-streaming-history/

True
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ago by Newbie (270 points)

This statement is mostly accurate, but it oversimplifies the issue. The average length of hit songs has dropped from over four minutes in the 1990s to roughly three minutes today. Streaming platforms and TikTok both play a part in that shift because they reward songs that grab listeners quickly and are easy to replay. Still, there are other factors behind this trend, like how artists structure songs, changes in popular genres, and the way streaming services count plays. So while TikTok definitely influences song length, it’s only one piece of a much bigger picture.

Sources:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/interactive/2024/shorter-songs-again/ 

https://hmc.chartmetric.com/shorter-songs-trend-streaming-history/

True
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ago by Newbie (310 points)


I agree that TikTok has encouraged artists to produce briefer and dramatic music, as stated in the Billboard article on how streaming trends and TikTok are shortening tracks. Artists now concentrate on memorable hooks and instant appeal to swiftly grab viewers' attention because the majority of TikTok videos are merely a few seconds long. In the fast-paced digital world of today, where viewers have shorter attention spans and frequently make snap decisions about whether to continue listening, this change makes sense. Shorter songs can therefore be more successful on streaming services and become viral, which is ideal for the bite sized content culture that TikTok has contributed to.

https://www.billboard.com/pro/songs-getting-shorter-tiktok-streaming/

True

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