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On The Table Read “the best entertainment magazine in the UK“, experts at SeatPick checked out data from Spotify and YouTube to find the catchiest football songs ever.
An estimated 12,000 monthly searches for ‘Football songs’ are done globally, according to Google keyword data. Who can forget Shakira’s iconic Waka Waka and KNAAN’s Wavin’ Flag? What makes these songs so memorable that we play them each time a football tournament is on?
The experts at SeatPick tested this by scraping data from Spotify’s API and YouTube views to find the catchiest football anthems. They measured how catchy each track is by how danceable and energetic it is, its ‘speechiness’ level (the number of spoken words), and its valence (how positive the track is).
Science has spoken, and SeatPick can officially reveal that the catchiest World Cup song is Shakira’s Waka Waka (It’s Time for Africa). It earned a total catchiness score of 8.4/10 based on factors such as its popularity, danceability, and energy.
It is also the most danceable football song, scoring 7.66/10, this is due to its high tempo and beat-driven melody. Additionally, it scored 79/100 for popularity, which is true as the music video has been viewed over 3.3 BILLION times on YouTube! To this day, the track has received over 15 million downloads and was the seventh most popular song of 2010.
And although Waka Waka’s beat is catchy, its lyrics are extremely catchy too, and they are repeated numerous times in each chorus. No wonder it earned the title of the catchiest song…
“The main phrase “Waka Waka” has been repeated a significant number of times to emphasize its importance (Waka Waka means “do it” in Cameroonian),” explained Professor Jake Cohen, Professor of Music Appreciation from Baruch College. “There is a major change at 1:04, as a cymbal-like instrument is introduced to add more variation to the melody. Furthermore, the new vocalist at 2:12 generates a unique kind of exotic sensation to its listeners.” *
A study conducted by Nunes, Ordanini, and Valsesia (2014)for the Marshall School For Business helps support Cohen’s comments. They analysed 55 years’ worth of Billboard Hot 100 hits and concluded that the use of repetitive lyrics in popular songs was a major factor in helping them achieve higher chart success in a quicker time frame.*
Ranking second place is Trinidad Cardona’s Hayya Hayya (Better Together) which scored 6.9/10. Released as the first single from this year’s official World Cup soundtrack, Hayya Hayya is an upbeat track with an infectious R&B groove, earning it its high danceability and energy scores. Despite only being released in April, this track’s high placement in the results suggests it may become a World Cup classic in years to come.
Ricky Martin’s La Copa de la Vida takes the third spot with a catchiness score of 6.5/10. The Samba-tinged anthem released for the 1998 World Cup was rated high due to its danceability and energy and the music video has since seen 78 MILLION YouTube views.
The song also topped the charts in 14 countries including host country France, where it sold over 500,000 copies and has been considered one of the best World Cup anthems by multiple publications, including Billboard.
In fourth place is Pitbull’s We Are One (Ole Ola) featuring Jennifer Lopez and Brazilian pop star Claudia Leitte, earning a total catchiness score of 6.5/10. Released in tandem with the 2014 World Cup hosted by Brazil, who can forget this catchy anthem laced with a Latin beat?
The song has grossed over 862 MILLION YouTube views, (the second highest in our results) and it ranks slightly higher than Waka Waka for its energy, which is down to its rhythm and fast-paced sound. We Are One peaked at #1 in Belgium, Hungary, and Switzerland, and has been certified Gold and Platinum in countries including the US, Belgium, Spain, and Mexico.
Fighting for fifth place with a score of 5.9/10 are KNAAN’s Wavin’ Flag and Martin Garrix’s We Are The People, and both tracks are equally symbolic of the World Cup.
Wavin’ Flag was also a pinnacle moment of South Africa’s 2010 World Cup. It’s catchy dance beat helped it earn a high danceability score. We’re sure this contributed to its 420 MILLION YouTube views, and top ten placement in over twenty charts across the globe as well as numerous streaming service playlists.
We Are The People, performed by Martin Garrix, U2 frontman Bono and The Edge was released for the Euro 2020 Championship. An uplifting anthem with a high-energy final chorus, it received high popularity, danceability, and energy scores, as well as over 31 MILLION YouTube views.
Nearing the bottom position at #15 and scoring 3.4/10 is Euro 96 anthem Three Lions, by Baddiel, Skinner & The Lightning Seeds. A surprising result, since it’s considered a staple of British football culture, but it has earned an impressive 42 MILLION YouTube views, the sixth-highest viewed video in our results to do this.
Three Lions is a high-energy song, scoring 8.7/10.As well, a festive version was re-recorded for this year’s World Cup, so although statistically it may not be a catchy song, its cult classic status shows that it is easily memorable amongst fans and the public.
SeatPick wanted to learn which famous World Cup and Euro Championship songs were the catchiest.
They collated the top 25 World Cup songs from Deezer, NME, ThisIsDig, and UDiscoverMusic.
They analysed these tracks by scraping data from the Spotify API (https://developer.spotify.com/documentation/web-api/) to analyse 18 popular official football songs to find out which ones are the “catchiest”.
Variables used from the Spotify API include:
Popularity (rating 0-100 on how popular the song is on Spotify)
Danceability – how suitable a track is for dancing based on a combination of musical elements including tempo, rhythm stability, beat strength, and overall regularity.
Energy – the perceptual measure of intensity and activity. Typically, energetic tracks feel fast, loud, and noisy.
Speechiness – the presence of spoken words in a track.
Valence – the measure of musical positiveness; tracks with high valence sound more positive.
Additionally, views from YouTube were also considered.
The final score is a weighted average of percentranks of (Spotify) popularity, YouTube views, danceability, energy, speechiness, and valence.
Data was collected on 22nd November 2022 and is subject to change.
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