Shazam turns 20 on Friday (Aug. 18) and has officially surpassed 70 billion song recognitions, marking two decades of answering the question: “Hey, what’s that song?”
To celebrate the milestone, Shazam is inviting fans to take a trip down memory lane with a special playlist comprised of the most Shazamed song of each calendar year for the past 20 years, including some of the biggest hits of the 2000s like Train’s “Hey, Soul Sister,” Sia’s “Cheap Thrills,” Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep” and more. The playlist is available to listen to exclusively on Apple Music here.
Just in case you’re thinking that 20 years seems like longer than Shazam has been around, it actually started in August 2002 as a text-message-based service only in the U.K., where users could dial a number, hold their phone up to a song, and then receive a text with the song title and artist. In July 2008, Shazam launched in the App Store and then was available to Android users by October that same year.
Throughout the years, Shazam has played a major role in bringing local artists to a global audience through music discovery. For example, the longest-running global No. 1 song of 2021 that was Shazamed on the platform was “Love Nwantiti (Remix)” by Nigerian artist CKay. The track also became the second song to ever surpass 1 million Shazams in a week.
“Shazam has played an impactful role in my career,” CKay said in a press statement. “It allowed millions of people all over the world to discover me and my unique Nigerian sound. It made me a global sensation even before I started to perform all over the world. The story of CKay cannot be told without Shazam connecting me to the world.”
To celebrate 20 years of Shazam, see below for 20 fun facts about the platform, from the most Shazamed artist and song of all time to the first song to reach 1 million, 10 million and 20 million Shazams.
-
First Shazamed Song
“Jeepster” by T. Rex on April 19, 2002 (using the service’s pre-launch public beta)
-
First Track to Reach 1,000 Shazams
Eminem’s “Cleanin’ Out My Closet” in September 2002
-
First Track to Reach 1 Million Shazams
“TiK ToK” by Ke$ha in February 2010
-
First Track to Reach 10 Million Shazams
“Somebody That I Used to Know” by Gotye feat. Kimbra in December 2012
-
First Track to Reach 20 Million Shazams
“Prayer In C (Robin Schulz Radio Edit)” by Lilly Wood & The Prick and Robin Schulz in October 2015
-
First Artist to Hit 1 Million Shazams
Lil Wayne in February 2009
-
First Artist to Hit 10 Million Shazams
Lil Wayne in June 2011
-
First Artist to Hit 100 Million Shazams
David Guetta in May 2015
-
Fastest Track to Reach 1 Million Shazams
“Butter” by BTS reached 1 million Shazams in nine days
-
Fastest Track to Reach 10 Million Shazams
“Shape of You” by Ed Sheeran reached 10 million Shazams in 87 days
-
Fastest Track to Reach 20 Million Shazams
“Dance Monkey” by Tones And I reached 20 million Shazams in 219 days
-
Most Shazamed Artist of All Time
Drake is the most Shazamed artist of all time with more than 350 million Shazams
-
Most Shazamed Song Ever
“Dance Monkey” by Tones And I is the most Shazamed song ever with more than 41 million Shazams
-
Most Shazamed Song Using the “2580” Text Service
“Crazy” by Gnarls Barkley
-
Top Hip-Hop/Rap Shazamed Song
“Can’t Hold Us” by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis feat. Ray Dalton
-
Top Dance Shazamed Song
“Prayer In C (Robin Schulz Radio Edit)” by Lilly Wood & The Prick and Robin Schulz
-
Top R&B/Soul Shazamed Song
“All of Me” by John Legend
-
Top Latin Shazamed Song
“Mi Gente” by J Balvin and Willy William
-
Top Pop Shazamed Song
“Let Her Go” by Passenger
-
Top Singer/Songwriter Shazamed Song
“Take Me to Church” by Hozier