By Mitch Rice
Casinos and music have always had a complicated relationship. The card table has given songwriters heartbreak, tension, metaphor, and drama in equal measure. From Frank Sinatra charming the house at the Sands to country singers using the roulette wheel as shorthand for romantic risk, gambling imagery runs through decades of popular music in ways that go far beyond novelty. But which artists are actually the most obsessed? New research has put a number on it, and the results are more revealing than you might expect.
According to data compiled by WhichBingo, home of the new online casino sites reviewed and rated for UK players, the most casino-obsessed song currently on Spotify belongs not to a Vegas crooner or a hip-hop high roller, but to a country singer from the American South. Tucker Wetmore’s track “Casino,” lifted from his 2024 debut album What Not To, clocks a casino mentions-per-minute score of 3.04, placing it ahead of every other song with the word in its title. The methodology was simple: take the top songs featuring “casino” in their name, count how many times the word appears in the lyrics, and divide by track length. Wetmore’s song, which runs just over two and a half minutes and uses the word eight times, wins by some distance.
The Ranking in Full
Alternative and indie act Radium Dolls take second place with their own song titled “Casino,” scoring 2.79. Despite featuring the word twelve times, the highest raw count of any track in the top ten, the song’s longer runtime of four minutes and eighteen seconds pulls the per-minute rate below Wetmore’s. Solo artist Niels sits third at 2.52, and London-born rapper Ambush Buzzworl completes the top four with a score of 2.17.
Rounding out the top five is Indiana alternative blues band Houndmouth with “Casino (Bad Things),” scoring 1.13. Their placement ahead of considerably more famous names is partly a function of brevity: the song runs two minutes and forty seconds, and every casino reference counts.
Further down the list, the gap between the upper tier and the rest widens considerably. Wilco’s “Casino Queen” checks in at sixth with 1.10, the Nashville Cast recording of “Casino” lands seventh at 0.86, and then comes the entry that will raise the most eyebrows among music fans.
Where Arctic Monkeys Fit In
Sheffield’s Arctic Monkeys, Brit Award winners and one of the most critically respected rock acts of the past two decades, land at eighth with a score of 0.85. Their entry is “Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino,” the title track from their 2018 album of the same name. It is a song that uses the casino setting as atmosphere rather than subject: a detached, cinematic piece built around Alex Turner’s lounge-lizard persona and a Jupiter-set hotel that happens to have a casino floor. The word appears, but it is not the point.
That is precisely why the score is low. Casino-mentions-per-minute is a measure of lyrical obsession, not artistic engagement with the theme. By that measure, “Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino” is a casino song in the same way that a Tarantino film is a film about diners. The setting is ever-present; the fixation lies elsewhere.
The list closes with Grimlxck’s “Casino” at 0.77 and Shed Seven’s “Casino Girl” in tenth at 0.76. The Sheffield connection between Shed Seven, a band from York who spent much of their career associated with the Britpop scene, and Arctic Monkeys sharing the lower half of a casino-song ranking is a minor footnote, but worth a smile.
What the Numbers Actually Tell Us
The striking thing about this research is what it reveals about how different genres use gambling imagery. Country music, as Wetmore demonstrates, tends to weaponise the casino as metaphor: the gamble on love, the bad odds, the house always winning. The casino is a feeling, a verb. You are doing something risky.
Rock and alternative acts treat the casino more as environment. Arctic Monkeys put you in the building. Houndmouth call it “Bad Things.” The tension is present, but it is architectural rather than confessional.
Hip-hop, represented here by Ambush Buzzworl, occupies a different register again. The casino appears as a marker of stakes and aspiration, a landscape in which the speaker is operating rather than one they are warning you about.
None of this is surprising to anyone who has spent time with popular music across genres. But it is useful to see it quantified. The casino has always been one of music’s most flexible settings, capable of carrying weight in a three-chord country song and equal weight in an art-rock concept album.
For listeners who find themselves genuinely pulled toward the world the music describes, the options for exploring casino gaming have expanded considerably in recent years. The range of licensed, regulated platforms now available to UK players means there is no shortage of ways to see whether your luck holds better than the narrator’s usually does.
Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

