• Ada
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    10611 months ago

    Not going to give substack any views, so I’ll pass on this one

    • tubbadu
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      4311 months ago

      What’s wrong with it? (I never heard about it, just asking)

      • Ada
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        11 months ago

        They commodify and profit from Nazis on their platform. When called out for it, their response was “We don’t like Nazis either, but we won’t do anything about them and we’ll continue to take our cut from their presence on our platform”

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          Oh I remember hearing that quote. That was them? I had a conversation about it like a week ago. I read “substack” in the article but all tech names are pretty interchangeable to me. They all have the same groupings for the type of thing they are and substack sounded like image hosting or something to do with coding or some template bank for some kind of necessity like invoices or something. Point is, tech names are stupid and I didn’t even put the name to the site as I read it. Good to know, though.

        • just another devA
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          1911 months ago

          If you have an adblocker, and you’re not visiting any of those nazi sites directly, but do derail a comment section about a totally unrelated article? I say it is, yeah.

          Then again, I can be pretty petty about circlejerks.

          • @[email protected]
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            611 months ago

            If I’m going to travel to a certain city I’m not going to stay in the hotel that’s hosting the Nazi convention. Here you are saying “yeesh it’s not like the convention will be inside your room!” But there are other hotels - simple as that.

            You act like a person needs some much better, really, really good reason not to read this article. If the site hosts Nazi content, that’s quite enough for me to just scroll to the next post. Why do any of us need to convince you or anyone else why this small act of conscience is valid?

            • just another devA
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              311 months ago

              You definitely don’t have to. But if you were actually trying to, let me assure you that equating the reading of a harmless blog post to paying a hotel would not have done the trick.

              • @[email protected]
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                511 months ago

                Then you can’t understand analogies. Because you patronize a hotel by staying there, and you patronize a website by visiting it. The differences in their business models are immaterial to the comparison. But I can tell quite clearly you’re determined not to understand any of this so I’ll just stop there.

        • @[email protected]
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          1211 months ago

          Viewing a website doesn’t mean supporting the website. Especially if you use an adblocker.

  • @[email protected]
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    10511 months ago

    So OP has posted this everywhere, even getting it flagged on Hacker News. Article is weak sauce:

    I would agree with author that there are many problems with Spotify but concentrating on the artist revenue per stream and then publishing your top hits of the year as YouTube links? Really? Go and find out what the artist share per stream is on YouTube (regular YouTube video) for soundtracks. I’ll wait. Hint: there’s a reason that soundtracks using unauthorised copyrighted work get muted or taken down rather than revenue being redistributed.

    Recommending a paid desktop MacOS music app for local content? There are hundreds of local music players but OK… but none of the criticisms of Spotify were about the client! Foobar2000 (mentioned for mobile playback) supports Spotify streaming

    Article seems to boil down to ‘I got tired of Spotify recommendations and I am an aspiring musician at an early stage in my professional career so I am recommending Bandcamp and soap boxing about artist revenue share’ . There’s a reason that people, some with local music libraries in the TeraByte range listen to Spotify. There’s also all the competing services - Apple Music; YouTube; Deezer; Tidal; Amazon; etc…

    Recommendation to OP: If you are trying to persuade people on something, then decide what point you want to concentrate on, consider the pro’s and cons for your position, and make your point based/reinforced on that. Don’t meander around a bunch of inchoate personal gripes and affections that don’t really relate to one another or any particular point.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        I’ve been using Qobuz for a while now and it’s pretty good. Good sound quality, good library, all that. I used Tidal before and it has good quality too, but it didn’t have as many albums or artists that I listen too, it seems more geared towards hip hop.

        • Kyoyeou (Ki jəʊ juː)
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          111 months ago

          Sadly Tidal doesn’t have Rammstein which is my second most listened group so it’s a no for me, if I’m not wrong Tidal was made by Hip Hop artists

  • Endorkend
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    11 months ago

    A while back I realized my phone has 256GB of internal storage and since I don’t take pictures or put anything else on it, I was running around with 256GB of free storage wherever I went.

    And that’s pretty much when it clicked for me that I was paying Spotify for access to music I already have from the pre-spotify days for a convenience that no longer is valid.

    I dove into my box of CD’s and DVDs and put the 30 something gigs of music I collected since the mid 90’s on my phone and haven’t used spotify since.

    EDIT: and, yeah, I’ve re-instanced my music, movie and series downloaders and went back to sailing the high seas.

    I switched to Netflix/Spotify, because of the convenience and timing of release they provided, they were also more reliable in terms of quality (“free” versions labeled ass 1080p often aren’t actually 1080p, etc).

    But the sheer cost of Spotify, Paramount+, Disney+, Netflix, etc, etc, etc to listen to and watch what I want, has made the convenience/cost calculation move from being acceptable to being even more than what it used to be buying CD’s and DVD’s.

    On top of that the audio and video quality have deteriorated over the years, availability has become spotty, at best (like certain services removing movies and shows, even some removing movies and shows you paid extra for), we’re also dealing with these services pushing ads on top of us already paying subscriptions and fragmenting their market to the extent everything has become entirely unaffordable.

    I used to buy maybe 2-3 CD’s in a year and a boxset of a show and a movie once a year.

    Now simply subscribing to every service that has something I want for just 1 month costs more than what I spent per year previously.

    Gabe Newels words are still right on the money.

    Piracy is a service problem and the service provided these days makes Piracy the better option, again.

  • Camelbeard
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    5311 months ago

    Unlike Disney, Netflix, etc, Spotify is the only streaming service where I never think oh this is missing let’s find a torrent.

    Music streaming (at least for the consumer) is so much better than video. Where it’s super scattered over multiple services all wanting money.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      Maybe you don’t listen to many international songs, I always find grey songs on the playlists I like.

      • Camelbeard
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        311 months ago

        Probably most artists I listen to are European or American.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      I find that I can only find about 90 percent of what I want to listen to. That’s more than enough of a burden to opt out entirely. Live albums, demos, collabs, and obscure dead bands you can’t really find with great success

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Yeah I’ve never fully switched to Spotify because of that but I do like their library and ease of use, the playlist function we use for parties a lot and it’s just easy and everyone understands it already.

        As a Phish head and purveyor of bootlegs, and sometimes specific masters of classic albums, my personal music collection has always been a sacred space.

  • Flying Squid
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    4411 months ago

    I agree with her arguments about Spotify overall, but this amused me-

    To celebrate my newfound freedom, I downloaded a 13-minute long Taylor Swift megamix, and CAN YOU DO THAT ON SPOTIFY? I didn’t think so. I also then went on to Bandcamp after I got paid the other day and bought some music. It felt good.

    As if Spotify somehow prevented her from doing those things anyway…

    • @[email protected]
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      2711 months ago

      Don’t ya know if you have prime and Netflix you can no longer legally purchase a blue ray ever

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      Obviously this is presented in the sense that being a Spotify user means you’re not pursuing other methods of music acquisition, and to be fair that’s probably the case for most people, you’re paying for a service that’s supposed to meet all your music listening needs after all. Personally I also use other means like vinyl, YouTube, and a large local collection but that’s because I’m deep into music, also as a maker of it.

  • @[email protected]
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    4011 months ago

    And in 2024, Spotify will stop paying out songs which get less than 1000 streams in a year. Which means for me, as an artist in the early stages of my career, I am going to get paid nothing. I could get over 1000 streams on all my songs in total, but still get paid nothing. I could get 999 streams on a song one year and 999 streams on it the next year… and still get paid nothing.

    As the author states in the previous paragraph, Spotify pays 0.003c per stream. I don’t think the author has done the maths. 1000 streams equals 3c. He’s complaining over not getting paid 3c as if that will fund his career

    • @[email protected]
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      5111 months ago

      It’s not 0.003¢ per steam, it’s $0.003. (Actually £0.003, per that article.)

      So 1000 streams should pay $3.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      Your 3c (or $3, whatever) might not be much but they’re saving that across thousands and thousands of small artists so for them it’s another lucrative way of skimming the profits of the actual creators for themselves.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        From what I read, it’s more about stopping people using auto generated songs and uploading thousands of songs

  • Fake4000
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    3811 months ago

    Spotify used to be good but now they charge you the price of buying an album outright.

    Might as well buy an album monthly and actually own it.

    • @[email protected]
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      3511 months ago

      That works if you listen to just a small number of albums, but I average about 15 unique albums per month and probably 60 per year.

      • snowe
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        911 months ago

        lol yeah I listened to over 150 new genres and thousands of artists this past year (according to Spotify wrapped), buying all those albums would be thousands of dollars if not tens of thousands.

      • @[email protected]
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        411 months ago

        Just to add, I do buy albums but more as a way to support the artists. Tidal is for convenience.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        If I was really strict about paying for all my media (which I cannot afford now), I’d buy the albums gradually anyway, starting from ones I like most.

        Also how do you discover so much?

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          To be honest I simply find Tidal + Plex integration to be more convenient than piracy. I’ll pay my $10 per month for the ease of use and still buy an album or two per month from artists I want to support.

          My discovery is a combination of Tidal and last.fm similar artists/recommendations and people on various forums. It’s one of the few things I still go back to Reddit for. The other thing is that I like to listen to a band’s full discography when I discover them. I recently found The Ocean and all 9 of their albums are solid. That’s a lot to buy.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 months ago

            Good that it works. I use a free tier of a streaming service for discovery, but I cannot imagine not having my actual collection I listen to the most often depend on a streaming service. You’re locked into only using their player, cannot use a dumb mp3 player at all, can lose all your collection if you’re in a situation when you’re unable to pay, and also the tracks you like might be gone because of copyright shenanigans. The on-disk DRM-less collection is just FAR more comfortable.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 months ago

              I’m not locked into their player. Tidal integrates through Plex and I manage my music library between Tidal and local files there. And again, I still buy albums but we’ve both acknowledged we can’t buy all the music we would listen to.

                • @[email protected]
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                  211 months ago

                  No, anything from Tidal is still DRM controlled but it integrates seemlessly with everything I have locally.

    • Aatube
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      1211 months ago

      £10 = the price of every single album you listen to in a month, combined?

      • @[email protected]
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        1411 months ago

        Yup. When I was kid and teen in the the CD era, I was buying 2 or 3 CDs a month for at least 10 to 20 bucks a pop. Or I would temporarily have my parents sign up for something like the BMG record club when there was a good promo where I could get 10 albums for cheap and then cancel. Fast forward to today and I can get unlimited access to all music for cheaper than a single album per month back in 2005. I don’t know how these economics can make sense even if you factor out physical media and physical distribution.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      It was 9.99 for many years and now it’s 10.99, a ~10% increase. Not sure how a single, small price increase in years turns something from good to bad. Sure, there are many reasons to dislike Spotify, but pricing?

  • Nougat
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    3311 months ago

    My current rules are that I’m gonna spend £10 a month on music (what I’d be paying Spotify) and try to buy directly from artists. I’ll allow myself listening to stuff on Youtube so I can gauge whether or not I wanna then go ahead and buy a song or an album if I’ve listened to it enough times and want it in my library.

    So … it’s okay to listen to it for free on YouTube and maybe buy it directly, but not to pay a Spotify subscription and listen to it there (and also maybe buy it directly)? The whole rant about “Spotify doesn’t pay musicians very much” comes off as disingenuous.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 months ago

      The amazing mental gymnastics that these people go through to justify their piracy and inane behaviors.

      Musician’s pay is just the excuse of the day for them to feel okay about what they’re doing. Honestly, if you are gonna pirate then just pirate, stop pretending that it’s for a good cause or higher purpose, other than to keep your own wallets stacked.

      • @[email protected]
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        1311 months ago

        You could’ve replied to 100 comments on this thread about piracy but you replied to the one that had nothing to do with it.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          Fai point, but regardless it seems to have struck a nerve with the piracy crowd.

          I don’t have beef with piracy itself but I found it hilarious the number of pirates here standing on their soapboxes, pretending to be some kind of modern day Robin Hood and virtue signaling super hard.

          Guys, you are still ripping off artists and content creators regardless of their deals with media company, just admit you want shit for free.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Probably pirated almost every artist I’ve subsequently bought from and go to shows average about once a month. Have professional musicians in the family and they work as studio musicians, composers for media, teaching, play in bands that do covers for corporate events, or as a backing band for a front person. That’s probably the majority of musicians unless you’re lucky enough to be in a band that gains any notoriety. Most bands are passion projects between musicians who have day jobs and might only play a few small gigs at local venues. So when we’re talking about piracy as if it’s the most significant thing impacting musicians, really it’s a small facet of a very difficult industry to work in.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          I don’t really think piracy is the single most significant thing impacting musicians, my main point to the “Honorable” pirates is just to cut the shit and admit you rip people off because you want to, not because you are some incarnation of Captain Jack Sparrow out to serve justice while you loot and plunder.

      • Cake
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        111 months ago

        Honestly? No, while I do still pirate, I am slowly buying all the music I can buy in form of vynils records and CDs, other than digital downloads from bandacamp.

        Watching for free on YouTube is not piracy, and laughably, I’d say it is better than using Spotify that quite literally exploits artists for cents.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          No, while I do still pirate, I am slowly buying all the music I can buy in form of vynils records and CDs, other than digital downloads from bandacamp.

          Good on you, the act of buying is what makes the difference.

          Watching for free on YouTube is not piracy, and laughably, I’d say it is better than using Spotify that quite literally exploits artists for cents.

          My comment is in the wrong thread as the other commentor pointed out, it was directed at the Robin Hood wannabes who thinks somehow ripping off artists and creators is okay, because they have a shitty deal with distributors / media companies.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Jack Stratton of Vulfpeck was interviewed on CNBN about the Spotify IPO and gets around to making a good point about it here, “stop whining… me.” Artists don’t have to use a label and get paid in these “pitties” from Spotify, ultimately its a bizarre consumption model and likely unsustainable.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    Last year I’ve listened to more than 6k different songs. If you’d be generous for the math and say 12 songs an album, 9 euro per album it’s still over 5k a year. Spotify is just cheaper for me, even the high seas would cost me too much in terms of time

    • @[email protected]
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      2411 months ago

      Everyone who listens to the same downloaded 50 song playlist everytime they open Spotify premium is paying for you to use the service

      But I use it much more similar to you than those people so I am also winning lol.

      • @[email protected]
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        811 months ago

        Not to mention that if everybody listened like thak guy spotify would just increase prices.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        I spent >100$ on concert tickets to listen to artists I found on Spotify. Probably would not have spent this money nor discovered those artists by listening to 50 songs downloaded 10 years ago from Limewire.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 months ago

      I listened to 6k songs, just because spotify has them.

      Do i need it? Absolutely not.

      I cancelled when they increased the price and i went back to buying an album for life from the discount bin and putting it on repeat with the other 20 albums i still owned.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        Back when I had an ipod I spent days downloading songs. I don’t think my listening habits changed all that much, now I just don’t download them via “legitimate” routes anymore

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      I find it most useful as a radio replacement for this reason, you can’t find a service with more quantity. Personal music collection is still my main source though.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    Spotify has always been a pain in the ass. For the longest time you couldn’t listen to a single song someone shared because they forced you to create an account.

    Companies that force you to create an account to do the simplest action are assholes.

    • @[email protected]
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      911 months ago

      I don’t know why I feel like this is okay for Spotify to do but not YouTube.

      My thinking is clearly flawed

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        Yup, either require an account to use the service, or don’t. Don’t do some weird middleground. It totally makes sense for saving playlists or whatever.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      Companies that force you to create an account to do the simplest action are assholes.

      OOT but Instagram does this and IT SUCKS

      Worse, they don’t even show you properly like “Sign In to visit this account”, they just says the error message “Please try again”. I thought there was something wrong with my Firefox or adblockers… But, nope it’s like that in other browsers IIRC

  • Aatube
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    11 months ago

    Ugh, spotify soot again?

    At least according to spotify (it would probably be illegal for them to lie anyways), Spotify pays almost 70% of revenue to rights-holders (whoever distributes the thing, e.g. record labels), which means they take about the same cut as Steam. Good luck complaining about that.

    You often see people citing the $.003 per stream for rights-holders figure for Spotify. That’s not exactly what Spotify decides! Spotify pays rights-holders share of the 70% of the revenue based on how much they were streamed. TL;DR: Spotify pays rights-holders slices of pie based on how much their artists help bake. So, if artists aren’t getting payed enough, Spotify simply isn’t getting enough revenue despite reinventing radio for its free tier!

    Not to mention how certain rights-holders (fortunately not DistroKid) gobble royalties away from artists. And, the author’s solution to (insert @Nougat’s comment here)?

    (On a side note: I hate Tidal free, because it “doesn’t” have ads! Every single interruption I’ve encountered so far is the generic Tidal announcer telling me to subscribe to premium. Sometimes I even get a freaking video “ad” on cellular data telling me the same thing, and there are only 4 “ads” in total! There’s no variety! It’s just repeating! Aaaaaaaaa (dw just yelling me name

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      For what its worth (and its totally fine if you dont see it the same way) a free service that is promoting itself is a special type of advertisement and should be excluded from talking about ad supported content or when using just the phrase ads

      That being said it is still equally disruptive but its not trying to schill you something you arent already committed to using and for free service thats an entirely fair way for them to try to get new subscribers and seems more like promotion than advertising

      Agree to disagree but i do think its an important distinction when discussing ads

  • @[email protected]
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    2411 months ago

    Hey all, I’d like to distance myself from Spotify, but I really enjoy their discovery features. I’ve learned about a lot of bands both new and old that I wouldn’t have otherwise. Do you have any suggestions for a service that could replace this aspect of it?

    • @[email protected]
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      711 months ago

      I’ve used Spotify, Apple music, YT music and nothing beats SoundCloud stations for discovering new music based on a song.

      and their “More of What you Like” playlists are just stations based on your recently most played songs and they just don’t miss.

      for someone like me that has songs from a lot of different genres in my regular rotation of 10-15 songs every month or so, it’s perfect for discovering music.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      Bandcamp is pretty good. They do writeups that I think are written by real people. When you look at a band you like, it tells you about stuff other people who like them have. I’ve found a lot of stuff there.

      It is more about buying music than renting it, however. Most albums it will ask you to buy after a certain number of plays. I think the band can configure those details

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        Bandcamp was bought out by Epic Games, fired half of it’s staff to make the bottom line look better, and is now owned by some private corporate music licensing company that refuses to recognize it’s employee union and fired even more employees that were all involved in their unionization effort. I wouldn’t recommend supporting them anymore.

        This all happened in September btw so any enshittification of the service has yet to come to fruition.

    • TheRealKuni
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      411 months ago

      Not that it’s any better in terms of ethics or artist pay, but YouTube Music has relatively decent auto playlist generation with settings for discovery. Plus you get ad-free YouTube without having to use piped or vanced or whatever people are using these days.

      • 𝕽𝖔𝖔𝖙𝖎𝖊𝖘𝖙
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        11 months ago

        Yeah I know it’s not a popular position these days but I have been a Google Music subscriber since the early days.

        IMO YT Music doesn’t disappoint when it comes to finding what you’re looking for.

        And not having to worry about fighting Google on ad-blockers with YT is a convenient add-on.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      I find last.fm’s “similar artists” feature more accurate that Spotify’s. But that’s just for finding new stuff and tracking your history. Not really for actually playing the music. I linked it to Spotify and use them both together

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      If you like modern rock, theres a free app (no ads or any bullshit either) or listen via website. Former radio DJ quit the industry and started his own online station. Im definately biased here as i used to listen to him all the time when i would drive all day long, but as its literally free and not supported by ads.

      No account needed also

      Anyways if you like modern rock whatwasthatradio.com

      It is dedicated to only playing new music

      He didnt like all the amazing music that exists to continue to go completely unnoticed by commercial radio so hes doing it himself

      Hes supported by subscribers on patreon etc

      If i remember correctly all songs are 36 months or newer

      This is a proper SOCAN licensed service (canadian broadcasting license I think) so hes doing it proper.

      www.whatwasthatradio.com

      I personally have found at least a dozen new artists to listen to because of this free service

      heres some of the bands he has done interviews with to give you an idea.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      Search your favourite artists. Wiki them etc. and learn about them whilst simultaneously finding where they’re members play in other bands or have other projects. Also, it can illuminate what they’re influences were/are and you can listen to that too. I find a shit-tone of new music this way.

      Deezer. Interface/UX is a little jank but it’s private and discovery is good.

      Radio Paradiso. Berlin based radio. Weird and wonderful.

      • @[email protected]
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        2011 months ago

        Radio fucking sucks, amigo. Literally the most homogeneous playlists ever unless you are close enough to a college radio station or a major city that can support anything other than top 40 or the same 100 classic rock songs.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      I use Yandex Music for discovery. For some reason, I can’t get Spotify to recommend the same amount of new stuff I like. You might need a proxy though because the content there is region-locked. Also I used both Yandex and Spotify for free, it’s just fine on desktop with Ublock Origin.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    I just quit Spotify too and went back to mp3s I’ve downloaded with Limewire. I got sick of playlists, messy UI, etc. I also got tired of people talking about their top music of the year. I honestly don’t care what you listened to the most.

    All my mp3s are on my phone and on my Mac and work great

    I also am not guilty not giving artists the $.0003 per play every time I play a son. Less guilty than the $1 per song in the 2010s or $20 per album in the 2000s…

    • @[email protected]
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      1211 months ago

      You’re shitting on Spotify and use that to defend that you’re stealing from artists?

      • @[email protected]
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        1411 months ago

        Spotify is stealing from artists too. I’m just not lining that corporations pockets. I still buy albums from band camp and go to shows and buy merch — all much more direct impactful ways of supporting the artists.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        Spotify pays a fraction of a penny per play to artists. Who’s really the one stealing?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      I quit Spotify too though still in Apple Music. Hopefully later I’m able to buy non-DRM music (from something in Bandcamp to CD or even Vinyls). Actually I went to Vinyl store yesterday, it was such a refreshing experience.

      Honestly I got sick of subscription. I know I’m not alone with that. I want to actually own my own music. I don’t want to pirate either 'cause I still genuinely support those artists.

      • Mossy Feathers (She/They)
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        711 months ago

        Try qobuz. They’re a streaming service and an online music store. Obviously bandcamp>qobuz when it comes to supporting the artists, but anything you can stream, you can buy and download in flac, mp3, etc. They also have a fair amount of high-res stuff too.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Qobuz was such a great discovery for me a couple of years ago. I’ve bought so much more music lately because of it.

          Combined with my Plex server and plexamp on my phone, I have all the streaming benefit from Spotify, with my own music collection that I’ve built up for more than 20 years at this point.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Just a heads up, Bandcamp has gotten a little shady in the past year or so. I honestly forgot what happened, but I think they got bought out by some shitty label that’s known for treating artists like shit.

        But tbh I don’t remember correctly

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          I know what happened–they got bought by Epic (yes, Fortnite’s Epic), then I think sold just last year, and now their situation is I think in limbo, not sure

      • @[email protected]
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        611 months ago

        Yes, this is an installer for modded Spotify.

        For Android Auto though you need to turn on developer mode and enable unknown apps to be shown – it won’t recognise the modded app by default.

        After that it’s fine in my experience.