radio sucks
…and so does satellite. I even get sick of my mp3 player, and now it’s broken anyways… In my car I still have a tape player. With no way of taping anything anymore, I can only listen to old, old “mixtapes” I made years ago. These amateur tapes have songs that are temporarily refreshing, since I haven’t heard them in years, but still annoying as soon as the tape replays.
I have tried internet radio, and find the same problem. Lukewarm songs chosen by someone else? Not much better than regular radio, but at least there are (almost)no commercials.
I have tried Pandora, and now last.fm. Both websites have the same problem, for me: they are both just not big enough yet to really understand what I like, which is a mixture of somewhat-random music such as hip-hop, latin, persian, and RnB. Of course, I am picky within each of these categories, where the only common ‘thread’ would be a sort of ‘passion’ in the music or “mambo.”
The only time I find myself truly listening to a bunch of great songs in a row would be either during certain radio lunch-hour mixes or weekend pre-night-out dj ensembles. There’s always energy in their choice of songs then, and they typically choose great songs, independent of recent billboard chart hitlists.
I’m still waiting for the internet custom-tailored mixes to work for me - in the meantime, check out these helpful sites:
- last.fm - helps you listen & find your favorite music based on social data
- pandora - tailors your listening based on ‘music genome project’s’ categories
- Steve Krause’s blog - with a well thought-out breakdown of last.fm vs. pandora
- datawhat? blog - compares various ways of discovering new music
- MusicIP - another music-matching website
- tapestry - finds music playlists for you based on style, theme, & tone
- finetune [via Lifehacker] - first music site I’ve found that actually knew old-school reggaeton (i.e. underground) artists existed…also offers html links of your playlists!
Good luck to you in finding music that works for you. One thing I noticed is that most of these systems work better when you input a specific song or artist rather than a genre or tag…
If you’ve been in my situation and found a solution, please let me know how!!!!





Hi there! My name’s Rachel, and I’m part of the MusicIP team. How much digital music do you have? If you send me an email, I’ll get you a premium key so that you can try out the full version of the MusicIP Mixer — I’d love to know what you think of the mixes it creates!
Rachel
January 25th, 2007 at 6:36 pmrachel [at] musicip [dot] com
www.musicip.com
http://blog.musicip.com