Rec
🎵
i love looking at my music listening stats bc i love a pattern recognition moment but i've become indifferent to spotify wrapped for sometime now for various reasons.
seeing all those layoffs happen right after last year’s wrapped left a bad taste in my mouth and with how much the company is leaning into generative ai, i wouldn’t be suprised if gen ai is being used to supplement the missing labor for wrapped this year. music is not as fun without the humans.
i also dislike the culture that slowly formed around it. the idea of adjusting your listening habits so your results are “presentable” to your social media following is wild to me…why don’t you just…enjoy the music? i don’t know, people hold it on some weird pedestal.
this is honestly tied into my increase in grievances with the app as a whole. if i didn’t amass 40+ playlists in the last ten years or listen to thousands of songs from an array of places, people and time periods, i would’ve left altogether. but alas, i am here. and i wont pretend i dont still look at my wrapped results when they drop. anyways, last.fm is more accurate and i don’t have to wait yearly for those stats.
Nov 28, 2024

Comments

Make an account to reply.
image
100% agree. I‘ve largely stayed with Spotify because it’s just so widely used and I love to make playlists for friends. I used to make mix CDs before laptops stopped coming with built-in drives. But it’s this last social aspect of Spotify, sharing my love of music, that keeps me on their terrible platform.
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
zenlikeme same here! other than the large library ive grown i love my blends with my friends and all the playlists and memories they’ve shared with me over the years <3 other places don’t have that as much and music is Such a social thing for me
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
I’m honestly considering just downloading as many albums as I can onto my phone from cds (this would be near impossible though, there’s too much music 😭), I can try though !!
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
valoorie i am amassing vinyls and cds of my very faves and participate in things like bandcamp fridays when i can...but i don’t have the money or space to realistically do that for everything i enjoy.
Nov 28, 2024
image
You can actually use free websites to migrate your playlists!!! I moved mine over to YouTube music
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
taterhole i didn’t know this! i’ll have to do research into who has a larger catalogue between tidal, yt music, apple and whoever else is out there
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
deardoveswings the cool thing about YouTube music is that it has all of the music anyone has uploaded to YouTube! but other services might have higher quality audio and the discovery algorithms are probably better lol I just use YouTube music bc I’m on a friend’s family plan for free :~)
Nov 28, 2024
image
Music became content. I’m back to vinyl (and CD is also making a comeback, I see it around me)
Nov 28, 2024
2
image
onnoka music as content is unfortunately something i’ve been thinking about a lot lately, that’s a great way to put it. even going back to an ipod seems better sometimes.
Nov 28, 2024
1
image
This is so based and I entirely agree; I also miss the days that the Spotify playlists (ex: Artist mixes or something like that) were actually curated by people instead of algorithms
Nov 28, 2024
2
image
gemfound yes those days were peak for mysic discovery via spotify but now it all feels so generic and cold </3
Nov 28, 2024

Related Recs

Rec
recommendation image
🎧
“woman says ‘i love this song’ after every song on her own playlist” (core)
i always notice music; music is what feelings sound like. because it has to, the world will change—and people will too. naturally, one of my favorite parts of the year is between late november and early december: spotify wrapped season. keeping track of people’s listening habits (to figure out whose allowed on aux) has always been a nosy pleasure of mine. i never want to lose connections to change; music allows me to sever those relations—“you listen to catherine wheel?”… “i didn’t know you were into fiona apple too!”—it’s a great way to form bonds. music connects people. i for one relish in this understanding. i, unfortunately, am an impatient person and cannot wait until the end of the year. i take this ngenart quiz monthly to record my own listening analytics as i continue to delve deeper into this interest, and share them casually in hopes that others will join in.
Oct 26, 2024
Rec
📴
I consume a lot of music regularly, and a huge part of keeping a fresh diet of new listens going is having enough sources of recommendations that aren’t an algorithm that either 1) reinforces your existing listening patterns, keeping you stagnant in your tastes, or 2) platforms whoever paid enough to push their product to the top, serving you something that may not inherently be of inferior quality, but may not align with your tastes, may not be exciting beyond just being a new release, and realigns your current listening habits to be more in line with what the average user on the platform is also listening to — which socially might have benefits but which creates a homogeneity of consumption that can become bland since you’re listening to something really just because it’s the next product on the assembly line to have its public moment and not because anything about the music actually captured your attention. the current landscape of streaming is designed to keep you at an all you can eat buffet where you take what’s served to you, and as a result a lot of us have forgotten how to look at a menu and order.
so what does taking a more active role in your own music curation look like? for me, it’s meant not using streaming as a primary listening platform. I mostly use my local Apple Music library on my phone that I curate with the vestigial iTunes Library framework that’s still a part of Apple Music on my laptop. probably going to find an alternative soon since apple seems to be cutting integration progressively. I like this method because it forces me to choose what to sync to the limited storage space I have, forcing me to take inventory of what I actually listen to and what I can offload. the files I get are mostly from Bandcamp or Soulseek depending on whether it’s available for purchase or entirely unavailable online (as is the case for a lot of electronic music that was on vinyl only, which is where soulseek comes in clutch). I also have freedom here to change the ID3 tags to better sort and organize, rate, change track info, and track my own listening data.
Bandcamp and other music purchasing platforms are great because 1) it reshapes my relationship to music away from consumerism and back towards curation. I have to pay actual money for this thing now if I want to use it, so i’m forced to consider its value (usually i’ll stream a release first to gauge my interest). 2) having to spend money helps me to course out my meals so to speak, as i’ll buy a few releases i’ve accumulated in my cart over the month and cash out on Bandcamp Friday when 100% of my money is actually getting to the artist (TOMORROW IS BANDCAMP FRIDAY BTW!!!), and between purchases I can actually chew and savor and digest my last orders, they don’t get swept up in the deluge of new releases. my plate is full until i’m done and then I order more. also for the times of the year like now when new music isn’t coming out as regularly I take time to find older music that I would normally overlook while keeping up with new drops. currently very into early 80s/late 70s music with early digital production, kinda stuff that would evolve into synthpop and dance music.
so how do you know what to order? for me, I’m getting recs through trusted curation platforms. whether it’s bandcamp daily, y’all lovely folks here on PI.FYI, friends, or most importantly musicians who I follow on socials that share their tastes through posts, stories, playlists on steaming, interviews, etc. I like this last one especially because it’s kind of like a musical game of telephone. if I like an artist and they share their interests and influences it’s like every layer in this process is stretching my palate further from the sound that I was originally interested in and into a new territory that has some shared DNA but would never have been recommended to me by an algo because there’s no shared category or label between them, only the musical influence and interpretation of it made by the artist. as an example, I was a huge Skrillex stan, he signed KOAN Sound to his label, they collab with Asa who collabs with Sorrow, Sorrow takes huge influence from Burial, Burial makes some ambient adjacent stuff and takes huge influence from 90s rave music and drum and bass and 2000s rnb, now i’m listening to Brandy - All in Me, William Basinski, Aphex Twin, none on whom would get recommended by Spotify to me from Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites.
LAST thing i’ll say — because in yappin about this i’m realizing how actually passionate about this subject I am: MAKE LISTS! playlists are cool, but they can flatten your music into vague categories of “vibes” and “aesthetics” and encourage picking one-off songs from artists that you never form an active audience relationship with. I make a practice of making my own year end lists of top 25 albums (plus some honorable recs and top individual songs) and keeping them in a notes doc that I regularly update and rearrange over the course of the year. this forces me to consider the actual relationship i’m forming with what i’ve ordered for myself. did I like it in the moment but it didn’t have staying power? is it slowly growing on me? it also encourages taking albums as a whole. maybe I liked one or two tracks a lot but the rest wasn't resonating. that’s ok! maybe I rank it lower but now i’ve actually taken time to consider it, it’s in my library, and maybe (quite a few cases for me) something I ranked like bottom 5 albums becomes a retroactive favorite from that year as my tastes evolve. also 25 albums to take with me from each year is really more than you'd think, i struggle sometimes to even find 25 that I formed a true connection with. I think the biggest thing the itunes era ruined that led into now is the single-ification of music, the ability to separate the hits from the deep cuts. albums are meant to be taken as a whole, and then once you've really sat with the whole you can find what actually stuck. even then I like to keep the whole around because soooo often i’ll write off a track that yeeeears later I come to love. trust the artist, they made it like they did for a reason.
aaannyyyywayy TLDR: get recs organically, be more active in deciding your listening patterns, fr*cken pay artists yall, trust the artist embrace the album, really consider what you consume
Rec
🧠
I don't listen to any AI generated playlists because I prefer to hear ones curated by people. I love sharing music as a human to human thing. It's also dismaying how music streaming services prioritize the songs of artists whose management pay them, etc.
It's so fun to simply browse anonymous person's curated lists instead on top of sharing with friends. It's never been easier to peek into someone else's semi-private music preference and walk their landscape. Just today I found a person who's made dozens of playlists for specific beanie babies (!), all with no saves or likes.
We don't need AI driven sorting to develop taste and find things we like. Break out of the corral with me and run free. Let's see what's over the hill
Aug 6, 2024

Top Recs from @deardoveswings

Rec
🔮
mandatory part of the human condition, i fear. i have like 58 but thats besides the point
Rec
🏘
liking ur rec = saying hi when we go to get our morning papers from the end of our driveways (picture me doing so tony soprano style)
Aug 12, 2024
Rec
👥
two women next to me on the train are having an insightful heart to heart. a guy behind me is clearly flirting with this girl and you can tell it’s mutual. we all have rich, rich inner lives :)