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How the New York Knicks have helped Jay-Z and Fat Joe have 3,000% listener spike on Spotify

Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images
Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images
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New York City has not stopped celebrating since the Knicks ended a 53-year championship drought, and the party has, at times, threatened to get a little out of hand.

Whatever the excess, there is no doubt the run has lifted spirits across all five boroughs, with pride in the city sitting at an all-time high after a generation of near-misses and periods of hopelessness.

Nowhere is that mood easier to measure than on Spotify, where a wave of classic New York hip-hop anthems has surged in the days since Jalen Brunson and company got the job done — and the streaming numbers are frankly ridiculous.

2017 Roc Nation Pre-GRAMMY Brunch
Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Roc Nation

Jay-Z and Fat Joe among artists to see Knicks-themed boost on Spotify

The biggest jump belongs to Skyzoo, whose “Blue and Orange Everything” — named for the Knicks’ colors — exploded by a barely believable 35,210%, according to KurrCo’s streaming figures posted to X.

From there the list reads like a roll call of New York royalty. Fat Joe, Ja Rule and Jadakiss’s “New York” climbed 3,695%, with “Welcome to New York (Dipset)” by Cam’ron, Jay-Z and Juelz Santana close behind at 3,485%.

Jay-Z features again with “Heart of the City,” up 715%, while Fat Joe’s “All the Way Up” rose 630% and the Jay-Z and Alicia Keys staple “Empire State of Mind” added 615%.

DMX’s “Ruff Ryders’ Anthem” jumped 380%, Nas’s “NY State of Mind” 350%, Terror Squad’s “Lean Back” — featuring Fat Joe and Remy Ma — 291%, and Jim Jones rounded things out with “We Fly High (Ballin’)” up 119%.

Taken together, it is a snapshot of a city reaching for its own soundtrack in a moment of collective joy.

Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks lifts the Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award trophy after defeating the San Antonio Spurs in Game Five of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center on June 13, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas.
Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

The figures capture just a single day, June 14, measured against each track’s average before the Finals tipped off.

That snapshot may fade in a week or two, but with a first NBA championship in over half a century to savor, championship fever looks certain to run rampant across New York all summer long.