Spotify - anyone heard of it?

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findanyfilm.comadvert fuck off every 3songs

The User Formerly Known As Pfunkboy Latterly Known as.. (Herman G. Neuname), Saturday, 14 February 2009 21:20 (fifteen years ago) link

And now 2 ads in succession. Anyone else getting this or is it just an anomaly?

In better news, some Spotify sites:
http://www.spotify.com/blog/archives/2009/02/19/spotified-cd-collection-and-some-other-community-sites/

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:17 (fifteen years ago) link

From the spotify updates alert thing. I thought my playing artists I already own cds by was pointless enough, but no:

This morning a user posted his Spotified CD Collection on the blog which I thought was amazing and really creative. What he’s done is he’s taken a digital picture of his CD shelf and then linked each jewel case to that artists in Spotify. So now he can sit and look at his CD collection online and decide what to listed to but instead of sticking the actual CD into a player you launched the album on Spotify, so cool.

Also:

Some other fun sites that have appeared recently include: Spotinews, which highlights new additions to our catalogue, Spotify Search which is an addon for Firefox to lets you find music from any web page in Spotify and a web page that finds new albums recently added to Spotify that match the top 50 artists from your Last.fm profile.

We love stuff like this so if you’ve done something creative with Spotify please let us know, we’d like to see it and share it with everyone.

The last.fm thing seems to work quite well. It's told me that a load of old Animal Collective and Disco Inferno are up.

chord simple (j.o.n.a), Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:26 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, what Neil said.

chord simple (j.o.n.a), Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:27 (fifteen years ago) link

Ooh DI Go Pop is on there, I've been wanting to hear that for ages!

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:28 (fifteen years ago) link

It's great! I've been wanting to hear it without fetching the cd for ages too, so everyone's happy.

chord simple (j.o.n.a), Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:51 (fifteen years ago) link

http://twitter.com/TheWordMagazine/status/1230055579

There is fun to be had here.

David Bentley: Rhythm Ace (Matt DC), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:29 (fifteen years ago) link

"Morning, Spotifiers. In what we believe is a first in rock and roll media, we're handing over the virtual decks on the WORD office to you, the reader. All day today (Friday 20th Feb) we're going to play the music you choose.

There's a collaborative Spotify playlist linked below, which you can add to and help build up. We'll play it all day and listen to whatever you select (and we'll choose our favourites for another, Best Of You Are The DJ list). And we'll be playing it on shuffle, so no need to worry if you get started late. Your track has just as much chance of being played as an early addition.

The Spotify list is here – click and it'll launch (as long as you've got Spotify). If you need to download Spotify, it's available here.

And of course, you can play the list via your own computer and assess the musical taste of the WORD Hive Mind yourself.

THE RULES
1] Post one track at a time. No complete albums or huge runs of a single artist – we'll delete them.
2] There are no other rules.

We'll be tweeting our reactions here so you can see what we think of the tracks as they play. And you can monitor exactly what we're playing right now via the miracle of our Last.fm page, which will be scrobbling the tracks live.

Comments welcomed below, of course, or sign up to Twitter and stick your oar in live and direct. The Spotify list is live NOW so let the uploading of Blackout Crew and New Riders of the Purple Sage rareities commence!"

David Bentley: Rhythm Ace (Matt DC), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Just added "Come With Me" by Special D.

Peter "One Dart" Manley (The stickman from the hilarious xkcd comics), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:32 (fifteen years ago) link

Hope they have Metal Machine Music!

Leon Brambles (G00blar), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:32 (fifteen years ago) link

Sadly the full 60 minute version of Dopesmoker by Sleep is unavailable.

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:38 (fifteen years ago) link

I think when Word Magazine's Spotify playlist be all up in your face you gotta be like YAHHH TRICK YAHHH

Peter "One Dart" Manley (The stickman from the hilarious xkcd comics), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:40 (fifteen years ago) link

Word's last.fm profile: possibly the indie-schmindiest of all time: http://www.last.fm/user/TheWordMagazine

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:42 (fifteen years ago) link

They're about to get injected with a poison...

David Bentley: Rhythm Ace (Matt DC), Friday, 20 February 2009 12:43 (fifteen years ago) link

TheWordMagazine

Recently Listened Tracks

Listening now using Spotify
Praga Khan – Injected With a Poison full track

I am using your worlds, Friday, 20 February 2009 15:59 (fifteen years ago) link

Your musical compatibility with TheWordMagazine is Very High

Music you have in common includes New Order, The Shortwave Set, The Orb, John Martyn and Vangelis.

;_;

I am using your worlds, Friday, 20 February 2009 16:00 (fifteen years ago) link

They appear to have stopped Twittering.

David Bentley: Rhythm Ace (Matt DC), Friday, 20 February 2009 16:05 (fifteen years ago) link

Your musical compatibility with TheWordMagazine is VERY HIGH
Music you have in common includes The Fall, New Order, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, Magazine and Kraftwerk

It's hardly a schmindie profile: just a very predictable one. You'd have to be a bit of an iconoclast to go "lol Bowie and Kraftwerk", no?

Anyway. Hamburger Lady by Throbbing Gristle is on Spotify, and thus should be an essential feature of any collaborative playlist.

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 21 February 2009 11:48 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah fair enough, predictable rather than lol indie I guess.

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Saturday, 21 February 2009 12:03 (fifteen years ago) link

This is fun, but Spotify can't cope with mixes very well.

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 16:03 (fifteen years ago) link

Have just noticed that when I mute ads, they pause--this wasn't always like that, right?

f f murray abraham (G00blar), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 18:41 (fifteen years ago) link

1. Spotify iPhone application in action. Allegedly:

2. Anyone else finding Spotify won't scrobble to Last.fm today? It just tells me "can't connect to Last.fm server". Other Last.fm-related shit working absolutely fine.

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Thursday, 26 February 2009 12:19 (fifteen years ago) link

That's cool. I might even go buy an iPhone for this.

(actually, I won't but it is cool.)

NotEnough, Thursday, 26 February 2009 12:44 (fifteen years ago) link

Reasons it might not be cool:

1. Apple won't allow the app in its store.
2. They will allow it but it will be a bit rubbish because it will drain the battery really fast
3. It won't drain the battery too fast but it will be annoying because it won't let you listen to music while doing other things on your iPhone because background processes aren't allowed.

Alba, Thursday, 26 February 2009 13:05 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeh, assuming the thing ever sees the light of day on non-jailbroken devices, #3 there is the real clincher :(

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Thursday, 26 February 2009 13:28 (fifteen years ago) link

Battery's going to be bad, aye, though mine is already shot to ribbons by Google Sync. Background processes are a-coming, it seems, so that's alright.

stet, Thursday, 26 February 2009 13:50 (fifteen years ago) link

Except then your battery life will get worse again, and it will all start crashing more.

I don't know why I am being so negative today.

Alba, Thursday, 26 February 2009 14:06 (fifteen years ago) link

the last FM app works plenty lovely, and can't see apple objecting to spotify app if last FM is ok

Britain's Obtusest Shepherd (Alan), Thursday, 26 February 2009 17:29 (fifteen years ago) link

They have all the Helmet stuff inc the born annoying single. And I listened to Quicksand albums yesterday. Was pleased to find this stuff. Next I'm gonna search for Unsane, Butthole Surfers, GVSB and Prong. (even though I have all these on my ipod I do like the idea of these guys getting paid.

How much do you think a fair price to pay for a subscription is? £10 a month is too much for me. If it was £3 id definitely pay. How about £15 for 6 months access? £15 every 6 months is more than they would be getting now from most people.

Pfunkboy in blood drenched rabbit suit jamming in the woods (Herman G. Neuname), Friday, 27 February 2009 20:27 (fifteen years ago) link

£15 for 4 months even would be ok. £45 a year compared to zero as well.

Pfunkboy in blood drenched rabbit suit jamming in the woods (Herman G. Neuname), Friday, 27 February 2009 20:28 (fifteen years ago) link

I really do rather like this app... they've got everything right - the ads are infrequent enough to let you enjoy a few albums without interruption, but annoying enough to have you momentarily reach for your wallet. A great selection of stuff too and brilliant for satisfying idle curiosity.

However, looking at the page for interested artists and labels it's quite obvious that by using Spotify you are providing lots of valuable marketing information to the labels involved and indicates the future directions that the service will take: "Your own artist area allows you to build a direct relationship with fans, old and new, across the world. Develop revenue streams through the sale of downloads, merchandising, concert tickets and more, as well as earning a share of the revenues we create through our advertising and premium businesses. Powerful, granular, in-depth reporting is available to participating labels and artists."

I guess most people have implicitly accepted that signing up for Spotify means their listening habits will be open to the scrutiny of major labels. However, this might not actually be a bad thing... if your tasts are as varied as most here then hopefully they'll just throw their hands up at the notion of targetted marketing and the like and just concentrate on putting out QUALITY music that consumers might actually want. Alternatively they'll manufacture some kind of crazy Kraftwerk-meets-Porter Waggoner-and-Sugar Hill Gang combo.

p.s. everyone in the UK should listen to the Leon Rosselson and Roy Bailey album on there. In the absence of anything by Crass it's a good alternative... I think this recession business is 80s nostalgia gone too far.

Rombald, Friday, 27 February 2009 21:36 (fifteen years ago) link

OMG, it's Roberta-from-Spotify!

mike t-diva, Saturday, 28 February 2009 11:52 (fifteen years ago) link

Ooh, she's lovely. I always thought that was an actress reading the lines.

Creedence Clearwater Couto (Billy Dods), Saturday, 28 February 2009 12:02 (fifteen years ago) link

Hmm. This thing is becoming a bugger for not connecting to Last.fm (although I'm sure that's Last.fm fault rather than Spotify's). At the moment it's got tracks queued, apparently. Be interesting to see if/when/how it connects ...

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Saturday, 28 February 2009 13:09 (fifteen years ago) link

The anti-music industry opinions expressed in this thread are... disheartening. Three years ago it might've been fun to laugh at Metallica and fuck the man. But instead we've got distros closing, indie labels cutting back their release schedule.

Anyway, I'm curious as to how Spotify is gonna pay the artists who's music they're exploiting for their own advert sales and subscriptions. (Not implying they don't, but there's nothing written online about it).

Tourtiere (Owen Pallett), Saturday, 28 February 2009 14:55 (fifteen years ago) link

i'm with you, worried about the overfishing of the entire industry just because their product is now so easily copied and distributed. (is odd here in the uk because we all grew up with listenable radio stations and are used to tuning in and hearing good stuff. is easy to forget it's paid for by tv license.)

but spotify do seem to have major label support and i doubt they'd have that if the labels weren't being paid.

koogs, Saturday, 28 February 2009 15:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Don't you think the recession might have something to do with labels cutting back? afaik it's never been conclusively shown that pirating has significantly harmed the industry.

ledge, Saturday, 28 February 2009 15:46 (fifteen years ago) link

but shops were closing well before last year.

koogs, Saturday, 28 February 2009 16:06 (fifteen years ago) link

When I've chatted with managers and artists and labels about album sales, the numbers in 2009 are far less than they were for similar releases five years ago, including digital sales. (On the bright side: t-shirt sales are way up.)

Tourtiere (Owen Pallett), Saturday, 28 February 2009 16:38 (fifteen years ago) link

Maybe people are more interested in watching dvds than listening to music nowadays? In my experience with people in general that is the case. Diehard music fans are a minority.

Pfunkboy in blood drenched rabbit suit jamming in the woods (Herman G. Neuname), Saturday, 28 February 2009 16:43 (fifteen years ago) link

And yes, Spotify does make payments to labels and artists. What the scale is, I don't know. If Youtube is any indication, it means that Cake guy from the Portal game will (rightly?) make more dough from Spotify than any bands making albums-as-statements.

Tourtiere (Owen Pallett), Saturday, 28 February 2009 16:44 (fifteen years ago) link

Someone speculated earlier it would be the same as last.fm pays: $0.0005 per play - meaning a million plays are required to get the artist $500.

the innermost wee guy (onimo), Sunday, 1 March 2009 12:40 (fifteen years ago) link

@ Tourtiere (Owen Pallett) - I personally don't see many anti-music industry opinions here, and hope you didn't mean my post which was a little tongue in cheek.

It's pretty much taken as read by all consumers that (SLSK users & blog cruisers excepted) you don't get something for nothing. For majors to offer their catalogues in this way there has to be some idea that it makes financial sense. In context of a global financial crisis in which "£50 man" might the same way as Zavvi et al, so Spotify brings us the first step toward the rebranding of music not as an art, but as a utility like gas or electricity.

As an artist one can't help feel a more than little affronted by the notion that notion of music as an 'art' will finally disappear from the mainstream. Not that this is actually anything new. Obviously music has always been "product" to many labels, and indeed even up to the 19th century and its "heroic" composers much music served a utilitarian role (soundtrack to a coronation, mass, birthday celebration of a prince etc.). IMO the idea of music as an unquestionable high art is a 19th century pretension that probably deserves to die no matter how much my conditioned personality rails against this "debasement" of the art; it after all only in the late medieval times that composers even began to put attributions on their work, and they still kick the arse of most modern stuff!

The wheel is once again coming full circle.

Rombald, Sunday, 1 March 2009 20:11 (fifteen years ago) link

online listening is killing piracy

tuomasters at work (blueski), Sunday, 1 March 2009 20:15 (fifteen years ago) link

gunships are killing pirates

@ Rombald. No, no, it's not an affront... I'm 100% "for" music as a utility.

The issue is strictly economical. Recording, mastering, rehearsing... all these things cost money. I mean, I love MPC-based records, Garageband-based records, Panasonic RX-FT500 records, records entirely made in-the-box for next-to-nothing.

But these new economic models will eventually render recording-with-a-budget impossible. You can tell me that "a budget don't make a good record" and I'd agree. But the bestest records of the last few months (Portishead, Animal Collective, Lindstrom, those Aeroplane remixes y'all love) all took gear and compressors and microphones and mixing consoles and nice mastering jobs. Erykah Badu, dude. That record was expensive.

One of the reasons why I think Bradford Cox is gonna be around far longer than any of us other bozos is that he's developed a method of record-making that is time-efficient and cost-efficient. Atlas Sound is the gorgeous sound of a record that cost nothing to make.

Tourtiere (Owen Pallett), Monday, 2 March 2009 18:05 (fifteen years ago) link

(I'm still waiting to hear about Spotify's business model.)

Tourtiere (Owen Pallett), Monday, 2 March 2009 18:07 (fifteen years ago) link


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