The Cumbre Vieja Volcano erupted on September 19, shutting down the airport twice due to the volcanic ash. (AP Photo/Daniel Roca) LA PALMA, SPAIN – OCTOBER 09: A car drives through an empty street in the neighborhood of La Laguna as lava flows from the Cumbre Vieja Volcano on Octoin La Palma, Spain. The partial collapse of the volcanic cone has sent a new lava stream heading toward the western shore of the island. A new river of lava has belched out from the La Palma volcano, spreading more destruction on the Atlantic Ocean island where molten rock streams have already engulfed over 1,000 buildings. (Photo by Marcos del Mazo/Getty Images) A man looks at his phone as a volcano continues to spew out lava near El Paso on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Sunday, Oct.
The numerous lava flows destroyed hundreds of hectares, but also formed peninsulas of volcanic rock, extending the surface of the island. (Photo by Marcos del Mazo/Getty Images) LA PALMA, SPAIN – OCTOBER 09: Ash and smoke rise from the Cumbre Vieja Volcano on Octoin La Palma, Spain. (AP Photo/Daniel Roca) LA PALMA, SPAIN – OCTOBER 10: Lava flows after the collapse of a part of the cone of the Cumbre Vieja Volcano on Octoin La Palma, Spain. The partial collapse of the volcanic cone overnight sent a new lava stream Saturday heading toward the western shore of the island. A new lava flow has belched out from the La Palma volcano and it threatens to spread more destruction on the Atlantic Ocean island where molten rock streams have already engulfed over 1,000 buildings. (AP Photo/Daniel Roca) People look towards a volcano as it continues to erupt in El Paso on the canary island of La Palma, Spain, Saturday Oct. Given that this is my own listening history, this isn’t a surprise, but I’d totally go to these.A volcano continues to spew out lava on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Sunday, Oct. Looks like it’s pretty heavily inspired by the recent Jukebox the Ghost/Mowglis show I went to. I plugged my own stats in to see what I got. Your six-month listening history is the foundation of the earthy-sounding “Forestfest” and your all-time faves make up “Unholy Space 2019.” Radical. The poster for last month’s listen dubs the festival “Volcano Jam” and sports a graphic of dinosaurs. “Festify” allows you to see what a festival would look like if it were based on your listening habits over the last month, the last six months, or your all-time habits. Playing into festival mania, a new website connects to your Spotify to design a custom lineup poster based on your listening habits.
Have you ever looked at a festival lineup and thought, “meh, I could do better”? A new service imagines what would happen if you could do just that.