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That Spotify afterlife speaker urn is a real thing you can buy

The Eternal Playlist Urn puts a wireless speaker in the lid so your music lives on after you do.

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Spotify built a speaker for your cremains. The streaming service teamed up with Liquid Death on the Eternal Playlist Urn, a collector’s item with a wireless speaker hidden in the lid. You can buy one right now.

The device ships in the US in limited quantities, though no price is listed yet. A discreet Bluetooth speaker inside the lid lets you connect from any compatible device and play your favorite tracks. The idea is to bring your music with you wherever you’re headed next.

A Speaker Built for the Afterlife

The Eternal Playlist Urn looks like a standard ceramic urn until you reach the top. That’s where the Bluetooth speaker lives, waiting to be paired with a phone or tablet. Once connected, it can stream music directly from your final spot.

You can grab one now if you live in the US and act fast. The company hasn’t shared how many units are up for grabs or what they cost. The whole thing is positioned as a collector’s item for people who take their music fandom extremely seriously. Sync your playlist and the speaker handles the rest.

The Playlist Generator for the Rest of Us

You don’t need the urn to build your goodbye soundtrack. Spotify also launched the Eternal Playlist Generator. Any US user can visit the site and answer weird questions to get a personalized mix meant to last forever.

The generator asks things like “What’s your eternal vibe?” and “What’s your go-to ghost noise?” It pulls from your listening history to build a custom playlist. Share it with friends. If you do buy the urn, syncing that playlist to the speaker takes a moment.

What Comes Next for Your Final Playlist

The urn ships now, but move fast if you want one. Limited quantities mean they could vanish quickly. No word yet on restocks or wider availability.

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For everyone else, the generator is free. Answer the silly questions, see what Spotify digs up, and share it with friends who appreciate dark humor. It might be the closest most of us get to curating our own soundtrack for whatever comes next.

If you’re looking for a Bluetooth speaker without the novelty, check out the best that’s out now.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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