Ask HN: Discovering new music?
How do you go about discovering new music? I find it easy to listen to the same old favourites, and would love a music-equivalent to hacker news. A lot of services, like last.fm and spotify, recommend music based on my listening habits, which definitely is an excellent functionality. I would, however, love to be fed recommendations somewhat uncorrelated to my current taste, in order to broaden my views. Any suggestions where to look?
36 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 95.1 ms ] threadI have found that very useful for finding new music by following (like Twitter) users who post songs I like, then then daily I get to hear new songs I haven't heard. I have got into lots of new bands that way. http://blip.fm/MCFlurry
+ Last.fm is not built too well IMO to discover new music
+ Been trying to go back to radio. AOL stopped streaming outside the US. Yahoo still works.
+ Been trying to follow a few Music magazine/ Music label blogs which has proved to be the best way to "discover" new music. Completely automated services are too, well automated. Such as: http://www.sixdegreesrecords.com/ , http://www.juice.com.sg/music/
Just be open minded and try a couple of albums each day. You will surely find something that appeals your ears/mind and you won't have to pay a dime.
Totally worth it
waffles.fm allegedly also has similar features, and RSS feeds of the top 10 lists of items in the genres you're interested in allegedly make for a great intro into new music.
I'm more interested in finding good music, than new (produced in the last X years) music, in fact I probably have a distinct preference for older music so with that in mind here's some techniques I use.
Last.fm has "similar to artist X" radio but I think it's actually "people who listen to Artist X also listen to" radio which I find gives good results as long as you don't choose highly popular artists (or those that are listened to by boring people) as that seems to average things out to the point that I've already heard the music and nothing surprises me. For my tastes I found "music that is listened to by people who listen to Eels" was interesting. It also worked with "Sly and the Family Stone". What I peronally like about this is that it's a mix of stuff I know and like with new and interesting music so the new stuff gets a chance to creep up on me.
BBC Radio 6 Music is basically a bunch of musos playing good tunes. So good in fact that they're alledgedly going to kill it soon in some big reshuffle, enjoy it while it lasts.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/6music/
Since they log every track they play on last.fm you can also listen to BBC Radio 6 style music on Last.fm here:
http://www.last.fm/listen/user/bbc6music/personal
My own personal fave tactic is to research my favourite bands and listen to the music they liked (including who they cover, namecheck, sample, work with etc.). This rarely lets me down. It also helps to have a circle of friends doing likewise as it can be time intensive.
https://old.thesixtyone.com is also a pretty good site for finding interesting music.
Also at www.myspace.com/martindifeo
Thanks!
http://www.wearehunted.com is another good one.
Got a band you like? Check out their top friends on Myspace.
Listen to the radio. (I mean on the internet). My favourite for this is radio paradise. http://www.radioparadise.com/
Put one song in, and it will give a set of songs that are similar to your song, with explanation why it thinks they are similar.
Too bad it is available only if you are browsing from US IP address.
I also really like Blalock's Indie Rock Playlist (http://blalocksirp.com/) - a hand-curated torrent with over a hundred songs a month. I go through it while working or exercising, flag anything that I like, and then check those bands out later. But that only works for the indie genre.
My favorite station is: http://somafm.com.
If you like electronic music also try http://www.philosomatika.com.
Check out archive.org's live music archive: http://www.archive.org/details/etree.
For classical music: http://theclassicalstation.org
As far as discovering new artists in genres that I really like, you can't beat Pandora.
Unfortunately, it seems like there is a sore lack of good criticism--critical studies of music that attempt to understand the music more than rate it--and this is especially true of popular music (pop, rock, rap, country, electronica, etc.). I can think of one place that's really good for rock history: Only Solitaire (http://starling.rinet.ru/music/index.htm). That guy's opinions are certainly not the last word on that music, but he does do a good job of putting artists and albums in context. For other kinds of music, maybe start with a Wikipedia article and go from there and see what you find.