BENSON WRAPPED: Benson Boone has accumulated billions of streams, with his overall artist credits surpassing 8 billion and his massive hit “Beautiful Things” exceeding 2.5 billion streams, while his album “Fireworks & Rollerblades” neared 6.2 billion, showing massive growth driven by popular tracks like “Slow It Down” and “In The Stars,” with millions of monthly listeners reflecting his continued success in 2025. Benson Boone is scheduled to perform in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Thursday, December 11, 2025, as a headliner for the MDLBeast Soundstorm 2025 (Photo by Derek White/Getty Images for 2025 NCAA March Madness Music Festival)
Getty Images for 2025 NCAA March Madness Music Festival
Spotify Wrapped and Apple Music Replay are no longer novelty moments. They are now one of the clearest indicators of how radically music consumption has shifted, placing the listener firmly in the driving seat. This year’s Wrapped reached 200 million users in roughly its first 24 hours, a 19 percent year-on-year increase, hitting a milestone that took closer to 62 hours the previous year. Spotify has been explicit about the commercial significance of this moment: CEO Daniel Ek has repeatedly noted that Wrapped plays a measurable role in driving both active user engagement and subscriber growth. This is not just cultural theatre; it is behavioural proof of where power now sits in music.
When listening becomes identity, not just access
What Wrapped reveals is not simply taste, but intimacy. Music is no longer something people occasionally attend to; it is embedded into daily routines, commutes, workdays and private emotional spaces. Consumption has become continuous, habitual and deeply personal. When listening functions like this, the commercial model surrounding it cannot rely solely on peaks of attention or scale alone. It demands systems capable of sustaining long-term engagement, trust and fair value exchange.
Riyadh Music Week (running through to December 13) and the XP Music Futures gathering which focused deliberately on industry infrastructure, and is anticipated to draw a record number of participants as part of the city’s widening cultural and commercial footprint. What matters is not the headline numbers alone, but what is being convened at this scale: a set of conversations that take music seriously as a consumer economy, not just a cultural output.
Riyadh Music Week
That context matters when looking at Riyadh Music Week, running through December 13, alongside the earlier XP Music Futures gathering, both of which have deliberately centred on industry infrastructure. Together, they form part of Riyadh’s expanding cultural and commercial footprint and are expected to attract a record number of participants. But the significance lies less in scale than in substance: this is a convening shaped around how music functions today as a consumer economy, not simply as cultural expression.
Across the programme, sessions address rights frameworks, export pathways, education, AI governance and long-term artist development, not as theoretical policy debates, but as practical responses to modern listening behaviour. In a world where music consumption is constant and borderless, careers require durability, markets demand clarity and the systems that support both need credibility.
The panels previewing the future conversation
Another clear thread running through the week is how global listening now exposes the practical limits of market-by-market industry structures. Sessions such as Defining Pathways to Music Export Success (also December 9) concentrate on what happens after discovery, when attention has already crossed borders, but careers still require legal, commercial and logistical footing to follow.
Riyadh Music Week
As streaming has normalised constant listening and global reach, the question of how value is collected and fairly distributed has become one of the industry’s most pressing commercial challenges. The Rights, Revenue & Representation panel (which takes place as part of the gathering on December 9) addresses that reality head on. With contributors including Peter Latham OBE, CEO of PPL, the discussion centres on how performing rights and licensing operate at scale, shaping artist income, determining investor confidence, and strengthening the long-term resilience of the music economy at a moment when streaming-led growth has made scale easier to achieve than sustainability.
When global audiences outpace old industry borders
Another clear thread running through the week is how global listening now exposes the practical limits of market-by-market industry structures. Sessions such as Defining Pathways to Music Export Success (also December 9) concentrate on what happens after discovery, when attention has already crossed borders, but careers still require legal, commercial and logistical footing to follow.
Why this week matters now
Paul Pacifico, CEO of the Saudi Music Commission, frames Riyadh Music Week not as a destination, but as a working platform, one that brings together policymakers, creatives, international partners and the next generation of Saudi talent to engage seriously with what comes next.
Riyadh Music Week
Paul Pacifico, CEO of the Saudi Music Commission, frames Riyadh Music Week not as a destination, but as a working platform, one that brings together policymakers, creatives, international partners and the next generation of Saudi talent to engage seriously with what comes next. His emphasis is consistent: music is an ecosystem, and ecosystems require collaboration, education and long-term thinking to thrive.
Take together, the sessions across Riyadh Music Week do not attempt to prescribe the future of music. Instead, they create space to examine a reality already shaped by listener choice. Spotify Wrapped shows us how we listen, at scale and with extraordinary clarity. Riyadh Music Week and the headline partners like SRMG (Saudi Research and Media Group), music giant MDLBEAST, alongside the official backing of the Saudi Music Commission, is where the industry pauses to consider what that behaviour implies, for fairness, for sustainability, and for the systems that sit beneath culture.
In a year when hundreds of millions of people publicly share their listening identity within hours, these conversations feel less like reflection and more like responsibility. Music has always been consumed, but what has changed is the way it is bought and sold, through subscription models, live experiences, merchandise, digital platforms and moments that now function much like modern retail, built on habit, emotional connection and repeat engagement.
As music embeds itself more deeply into everyday life, the industry is being asked to meet consumers where they already are: informed, emotionally invested and increasingly conscious of value. The task now is not simply to scale attention, but to build systems that allow music’s retail reality, what people listen to, pay for and return to – to compound into trust, and trust into lasting value.

