Weird, I thought, surely we're all loudness normalised nowadays? Down at around -14 LUFS for Spotify, I thought.
So choosing a couple of tracks that I already own, and purely for the purposes of research, I have ripped a couple of things from Spotify and Youtube to put them through a loudness analyser.
Interestingly the Youtube tracks both appear as you'd expect at bang on the -14 LUFS target with their peak level at around -5 / -6dBFS.
But on the Spotify tracks, example one is 5.9 LUFS over the -14 target and example 2 is 6.2 over.
They are pretty much CD loudness.
Here's an image of the two sets of waveforms next to each other with a track I've been working on for comparison.

The two spotify tracks are at the top, followed by their volume-reduced youtube equivalents.
So has Spotify abandoned loudness normalisation? If so, is this a good move on their part so that they can be louder than their competitors? Or a bad move because their listeners will constantly be on the volume control? Is that even an issue with most people listening on their phones?
But the big question is will other streaming services follow suit and abandon one of the best things to happen to music in the last decade?
Answers on a postcard please.
P.S. has anyone here recently tried a much louder recording to Spotify? Did it stay loud or was it turned down?