• @tatterdemalion@programming.dev
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    247 months ago

    Call me basic, but I have no shortage of new music from Spotify and YouTube. Spotify recommendations plus shared playlists from friends. There are a handful of YT channels that host pretty consistent quality musicians, like NPR Tiny Desk, KEXP, Colors Studios, Zildjian Live.

  • @bstix@feddit.dk
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    137 months ago

    I stream online radio while commuting.

    It’s a great way of discovering what people in other countries listen to or what is happening in certain genres etc.

    The small online stations are better than ordinary radio because they usually don’t have commercials and no need to attract large numbers of listeners so they don’t always play the most popular garbage over and over.

    It’s as if removing all the commercial aspects of radio makes better radio.

  • @MenschlicherFehler@feddit.de
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    107 months ago

    I am still riding the MP3 train. Music from indies and smaller bands I buy on Bandcamp or directly from the artist. Bigger bands from larger labels and really obscure stuff I get from Soulseek.

    Discovering music got more difficult after leaving Reddit, I lurked on a lot of genre subs. Now I mostly find new stuff through friends or Youtube recommendations.

  • @Albatross2724@lemmy.world
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    77 months ago

    Spotify (Web app with ublock and cracked APK), songs from movies/shows, and songs discovered from content creators on twitch and YouTube

  • @dan1101@lemm.ee
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    77 months ago

    Mostly YouTube recommendations and long compilation videos people have posted to YouTube.

  • I may sound old, but I still use Pandora and it has been one of my best avenues for new music and artists for the last 15 years I’ve had my account. It knows my tastes very well at this point and the recommendations are almost always spot on.

  • @reddig33@lemmy.world
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    67 months ago

    Pandora works pretty well for discovery, and has multiple “modes” so you can hear album tracks, not just hits. Just put in a few songs of a genre and/or artists you like to build a station of similar suggestions. Use thumbs up/down to tune it. I will warn you that after a year of doing this, it might get in a rut of playing things you’ve already thumbed up. If that happens, switch modes or create a new station.

    YouTube suggestions also has a pretty decent suggestion algorithm if you start thumbing up music you like. It’s also a good place to look at a particular label’s catalog.

    Both are free with ads.

    Also, if there’s an artist you like, be sure to look up who produced your favorite tracks. Chances are they’ve done similar music with other artists.

  • @Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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    67 months ago

    Favourites currently are:

    • Internet radio. Especially radiofreefedi.net which features music from people on the fediverse. I especially like their comfy channel. #radiofreefedi #RFF

    • Music podcasts. The Add To Playlist podcast from the BBC is my favourite. Each track they add is inspired by the previous one. Loads of great music, plus interesting guest musicians talking about music history, theory and vibes.

    • ViMusic. This is an open source front end app for YouTube music on android. No payment, adds etc. You can get it on f-droid. Found a few cool tracks via the algo but not as many as previous options.

    I have to say though that, like the boomers who went before me, I feel that music in general has become worse. I’m blaming the ‘winner takes all’ effect of commercial streaming platforms for the narrowing of artistic culture and the debasement of musicians.

  • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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    57 months ago

    Youtube.

    I realised a few years back that my music tastes had stagnated, that I hadn’t liked any new bands in… too many years, and that I was on the way to becoming to be a stuck-in-the-past old fart.

    So I nuked my youtube data to glass and started again from scratch with The Technique.

    Open all the interesting-looking music in new tabs, don’t-recommend-channel annoying crap, especially reaction videos. Flick through each tab, like and add to genre playlists anything cool, and open a bunch of tabs from the recommendations on that page. If I get three solid bangers from an artist, subscribe. Go with original artists rather than reposts where possible.

    Rinse and repeat.

    If the algorithm starts getting stale, browse and listen through playlists I want to hear more of (often using a third-party shuffle site), to dredge up the silt.

    I don’t generally listen to much of a song while browsing - you can tell from a handful of samples if it’s for you or not, and moving on quickly stops it from getting tedious.

    I have found and enjoyed vastly more new music in the last few years than I did in the two decades before that. It’s awesome.

    • @Interstellar_1@pawb.socialOP
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      27 months ago

      Very neat! I occsionally find interesting music on YouTube, but you seem to have a whole method down. I’ll have to try this out sometime.

    • CommunityLinkFixerBotB
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      -27 months ago

      Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !metal@lemmy.world

      • classic
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        47 months ago

        I don’t understand this not. The link looks the same?

        • Chozo
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          47 months ago

          That’s because you’re on Mbin, which further complicates Lemmy’s community linking process by making community links not always behave the same even though they look the same. This is something I really wish could be more properly unified across *bin and Lemmy.