Spotify will soon have its own music Instagram Stories
Spotify continues to add features to enrich the user experience. If we recently made references to the new functions that are about to arrive and that would improve the use of your Family Plan, now we are going to talk about the Stories, those small video clips that disappear (or not) within 24 hours of being published and that have helped Instagram (thank you, Snapchat) so much to become the influential and popular app that it is today. Everyone wants to have their own Stories... even an application, in principle, as far from being a 'common social network' as WhatsApp has them, although it calls them 'States'.Spotify was not going to be less.
However, Spotify Stories will not be available to everyone but will be an artist-only feature With these little clips of video, musicians, artists, stars and not so much, who have published records on Spotify, will be able to use these Stories to have a more personal and direct communication with their fans on the streaming service. This new feature has been discovered, delving into the source code of the application, by Jane Manchun Wong, a well-known Twitter user specialized in bringing to light new functions, in the testing phase, of different applications.
To access the Stories on Spotify, the user must click on the profile image of the artist in question, exactly the same as we do to do the same on Instagram.In the screenshots that have come to light and that reveal the new Spotify Stories you can see the Norwegian singer Sigrid, talking about a specific playlist created by herself, in which she talks about how different songs make her feel. With each answer she gave you could listen to a fragment of each song, being able to add it later to a specific list.
The new Stories feature in the Spotify app isn't rolled out yet and there isn't even any information about whether it will eventually become into a reality for all users. Be that as it may, we will have to be vigilant in case the day comes when it is definitively activated.