Imagine Dragons has reached an incredible streaming milestone on Spotify after their song "Bad Liar" officially logged its billionth stream!
The beloved pop-rock band has since entered 10 songs on the prestigious Billion's Club playlist on Spotify, making them the first act to have the most songs on the playlist.
Imagine Dragons Spotify Milestone: 'Bad Liar'
Hits Daily Double reported that Imagine Dragons are the first to score 10 songs with more than 1 billion streams on Spotify. They have recently been included on the Billion's Club playlist of the streaming platform.
"Bad Liar" officially makes the cut earlier this week. Other Imagine Dragons songs include "Believer," "Thunder," "Demons," "Radioactive," "Bones," "Enemy," "Whatever It Takes," "Top of the World," and "Natural."
The song peaked at No. 56 on the Billboard Hot 100, but it reached various Top 10 charts from multiple countries, including Belgium, Finland, Switzerland, and even the Czech Republic's and Latvia's charts.
Notably, the song was co-written by Imagine Dragons' Dan Reynolds and his then-wife Aja Volkman before separating.
"I've been home and we kind of decided, well, let's just hold off for a minute," he explained to Apple Music's Zane Lowe. "As we were writing it, we knew what it was about, but we also kind of didn't speak about what it was about."
Idolator has since described the song as a "brutally honest breakup song," while Billboard noted that its lyrical heaviness was like their 2012 song, "Demons."
READ ALSO : Dan Reynolds Hates 'Radioactive'? Imagine Dragons Frontman Says It's His Least Favorite Song to Perform
Imagine Dragons The Most Popular Band On TikTok?
The Things cited a study by a blog that concluded that Imagine Dragons was the second-most popular band on TikTok.
According to the criterion set by the study's experts, they found out that Imagine Dragons had more than 3,700,000 videos on the platform. BLACKPINK logged the most, with more than 9.7 million videos made on the platform, and BTS came third with 2.7 million.
Sadly, most, if not all, of those videos are already muted on the platform because all of the three bands' music catalogs are published under Universal Music Publishing Group. UMG has since severed ties with TikTok after it failed to strike a fair deal between the vast publishing group.
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