Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

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Lost In The Dream

387.4M streams

387,361,153

A Deeper Understanding

273.7M streams

273,746,447

Red Eyes

154.9M streams

154,885,171

I Don’t Live Here Anymore (Deluxe Ed...

107.6M streams

107,632,095

I Don’t Live Here Anymore

103.5M streams

103,495,069

Slave Ambient

54.7M streams

54,747,986

Future Weather

37.9M streams

37,931,493

Wagonwheel Blues

22.2M streams

22,172,703

LIVE DRUGS

18.7M streams

18,660,808

Spotify Singles

12.2M streams

12,242,668

Biography

The history of rock ’n’ roll is a story of splintering. Stop here for 10 seconds, and think: How many niches can you name without even trying, without having to pause for just a split second? They seem infinite and, already the better part of a century since rock’s bastard birth, still ceaseless, each new form defined by the mainframe’s perpetuity of flux. But over the last 15 years, The War on Drugs have steadily emerged as one of the mightiest counterweights to this endless division, reconnecting rock’s manifold hyphenates with an ardor and ease that suggest they were never split far apart in the first place. Folk, indie, kosmiche, noise, roots, arena, psychedelic, soft, whatever—The War on Drugs are this century’s great rock ’n’ roll synthesists, obviating the gaps between the underground and the mainstream, between the abstruse and the anthemic, making records that wrestle a fractured past into a unified and engrossing present. The War on Drugs have never done that so well as they do with I Don’t Live Here Anymore, their fifth studio album and their most compulsive and bold set of songs to date.