Stalkify bridges the gap between Last.fm and Spotify. Enter any Last.fm username and Stalkify will create six auto-updating playlists on Spotify based on that user's listening history.
Each user gets six playlists covering different time ranges: recent tracks, all-time top tracks, top tracks this week, top tracks over the past 3 months, 6 months, and this year. The playlists are public on Spotify, so you can follow them and they'll stay in your library.
Stalkify reads your public Last.fm listening data through the Last.fm API, matches each track to its Spotify equivalent, and assembles the playlists automatically. No login required on your end — just a Last.fm username.
Playlists don't go stale. Recent tracks refresh frequently to keep up with what you're listening to right now, while the longer time ranges update daily. Come back anytime and your playlists will reflect your latest listening habits.
On top of the six rolling playlists, Stalkify also creates a year-in-review playlist for every calendar year in your scrobble history. Each one contains up to 100 of your most-played tracks from that year — a time capsule of what you were listening to.
To get the most out of Stalkify, you need to scrobble your Spotify listening to Last.fm. Here's how:
Scrobbling works in the background. Once connected, every track you play on Spotify is automatically logged to your Last.fm account. The longer you scrobble, the richer your playlists become.
Stalkify was originally built by steffentchr back when Last.fm and Spotify were two separate worlds with no easy way to move between them. This is a modern rebuild of the original version, rewritten from the ground up with a fresh stack but the same spirit.
Stalkify only accesses publicly available Last.fm data. We don't store passwords, don't require you to log in, and don't track anything beyond what's needed to build your playlists.