Musician's Opinion about Spotify

Discussion in 'Internet for Musician' started by Area51, Aug 7, 2020.

  1. Area51

    Area51 Kapellmeister

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    so long story

    what do you people think about Spotify....please discuss the pros & cons of it, the business side of it and everything else...do you think it's an app for the long run or just another "trend" or something which will disappear sometime soon?
    what about it's popularity? what do you think of that?

    let me know, share like comment thank you
    :thanks::thanks::thanks::thanks::thanks::welcome::welcome::welcome::goodpost::goodpost::goodpost::goodpost:
     
    Last edited: Aug 8, 2020
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  3. LauraK

    LauraK Noisemaker

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    I really like having my music on Computer. It gives me a better feeling somehow :rofl:
     
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  4. Haliax

    Haliax Guest

    My wife loves Spotfiy, especially when she is doing the dishes. She just wants background noise, and doesn't care what plays next.

    Myself, I prefer a physical collection of music and be in absolute control over what I listen to
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Aug 8, 2020
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  5. Smoove Grooves

    Smoove Grooves Audiosexual

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    Yeah right.
    So you aren't going to accuse women doing the washing up as sexist? (Which is OBVIOUSLY what I was implying you would do, with my comment!)
    Amazing!
     
  6. Haliax

    Haliax Guest

    Actually, my wife and I have a mutual agreement. I'll cook and she will do the dishes, it works. My comment was bordering on baiting I'll give you that
     
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  7. fleschdnb

    fleschdnb Kapellmeister

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    Spotify has the younger generations in the bag. They dont know what an MP3 is.. If its not stored in an iCloud automatically, they dont know where to store it. Spotify was a groundbreaking game changer. Its DEFINATELY not a fad. Mp3's on tiny media player (ala the iPod) were the fad.. CD's were the fad.. Cassette tapes and walkmens, Sirius, etc.... all of those were just getting us closer to the King of Music playback.. All the On-Demand music you can want, all stored in the cloud, that streams instantly in high quality, on a device EVERYONE has on them 24/7.. Can be played in your car, on your headphones, on your home stereo system.. on your Game Console, computer, phone...

    I love spotify personally. I have found MANY new artists that I would have never found without Spotify's AI finding songs and "Enhancing" my playlists. 95% of those songs I dont like.. but 1 in 100 songs is a gem, and I find a new band, more music.

    I either listen to one of my own playlists I have built, or I let spotify recommend me songs based on my playlist, and hit next 100 times before finding a good song, going to that bands page, listening to their top ten, etc..
     
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  8. mercurysoto

    mercurysoto Audiosexual

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    I've always been been paranoid about a digital blackout, a systemwide Internet shutdown, for which I've been saving the bests songs and movies for years in mp4, mp3 formats. I've just forgotten all about it in recent years. I suspect those discs will die off sooner than the Internet fails, or maybe a new computing paradigm will turn them obsolete.

    Back to reality, I used to love Spotify.

    I've ditched it because for a few cents less I pay YouTube (I know, pay Google, me moron). The thing is I get YouTube music and no ads in any platform I use for less than the price of Spotify. There's one thing I've discovered: YouTube music is better than Spotify in one important regard: It doesn't have an agenda to push payola-sponsored artists in playlists. In Spotify, you choose and artist, listen to them and then Spotify pushes music you've never heard of before. You Tube music learns your preferences and feeds you the music you want, not someone else's you didn't sign up for. When it makes suggestions, they bring up related songs that are like "wow, I'd forgotten all about that song." Of course, I'm an old fart. If you are young and in search of new musical experiences, maybe this feature isn't that cool, or maybe it is if you listen to top 40.
     
  9. SacyGuy

    SacyGuy Kapellmeister

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    spotify is shit

    maybe the worst stream service

    you can actively search and not wait for people to choose for you. You could search music blogs/news/magazines/etc.

    I have a lot of CDs from de 90s that still looks good, plays good and none of them has any kind of problem.
    I trully ask myself what people to do fuck their media. In fact I still have diskets with msdos6.22, win3.11, dos games from 80s. All of them still works. I have an old pentium 100 just for fun
     
  10. Choosename

    Choosename Platinum Record

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    Streaming = Not yours
    Streaming = cheap content

    Music downloaded on pen drive to the car.
    Films downloaded on pen drive to tv.

    Spotify is like radio. I never discovered any artist on streaming services. They tent to show comercial white non harming content.
    Do you want to curate your music? You have to take a listen, 3 sec is enough to select what could interest me. I have a wide taste, but not to cover all the shit is published now on streaming services.
     
  11. k0d3g3ar

    k0d3g3ar Member

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    I think the key word here is "curate". I worked for a while in the 90s as a recording engineer/producer, and routinely was hired by Capitol Records in Hollywood to help them develop & record new artists that their A&R departments had discovered. Many went on to become famous and many didn't.

    During that time, I saw the inside of the industry that I didn't like. The concept of "units" (ie. records sold) and what they thought was their role in artist career development. Like this was a job, or some financial transactional thing. It wasn't, at least not to me (and I think this was shared by most of my musician clients). The music was above all of that - like the artist transcended the world of business, etc. by creating something that was authentic to them. But the industry just wanted to move more units.

    Today we don't make records like we used to. The records are now some digital file of ones and zeros. We convert that into sound that we enjoy. But the process has a lower cost of entry, and lower cost of distribution. The record labels are like some endangered species now. For many, this is a great endpoint. But for the average listener, although flawed humans used to act as gatekeepers to being heard, now it is algorithms and we've deferred all the human touch of curation to AI & bots.

    Spotify are the greatest beneficiaries of this. They don't pay the salary of A&R reps, or talent scouts, or recording engineers, producers, etc. They don't pay the salaries of marketing staff, publishing, etc. They just let the data center do the work. It is lazy, and unfulfilling. We try and make our technology act more "human", even trying to create artificial and synthetic versions of ourselves. In truth, the transactional economy will benefit because they won't have to pay humans to do anything. But the musician just wants their authentic story to be told and heard.

    I like the idea of "ownership" but it is fleeting. I could have a massive record collection, but at some point it appears sad. Like a shelf of dusty trophies of the past. I get that the burden of storing it falls on all of us, but at the same time I also feel that when I spend countless hours these days as a recording engineer, taking the hopes & dreams of my clients (musicians) and trying to produce something that sounds incredible, I am doing it because I feel there is a need for persistence - that their creation should live on beyond them. And if the endpoint is to load up a file to a data center and hope that it will be there in 20 years time, I've got my doubts. And they are furthered by the fact that if the barrier to entry is so low that 90,000 songs per day are uploaded to Spotify, Spotify becomes the landfill of hopes & dreams - where music goes to die.

    And that is sad. I don't know the answer - I just know the problems.
     
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  12. Evecher

    Evecher Newbie

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    it's a great app.
     
  13. Cracktopc

    Cracktopc Newbie

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