|||||Pandora.com Cool Audio Streaming Site|||||
typed in rage against the machine. next song was audioslave...ughhh
i'll forgive it though, as i can see the concept. thanks for the bumps and link
slayer rules. or so my deathmetal friends say. and bam margera. and HE wouldn't lie, right?
god that audioslave crap is still playing. i should skip it...ohh... all grungy stuff i've already heard. hooker with a penis is a good tool song, though. only five skips per hour,per list , huh? this is a pretty cool site, though... i'll try obscure stuff i always wanted to hear, but didn't want to buy, in case it sucked. strange genres will be fun too!
slayer rules. or so my deathmetal friends say. and bam margera. and HE wouldn't lie, right?
god that audioslave crap is still playing. i should skip it...ohh... all grungy stuff i've already heard. hooker with a penis is a good tool song, though. only five skips per hour,per list , huh? this is a pretty cool site, though... i'll try obscure stuff i always wanted to hear, but didn't want to buy, in case it sucked. strange genres will be fun too!
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pepezabala
- Posts: 3503
- Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2004 4:29 pm
- Location: In Berlin, finally
last.fm works with a similar concept and is available also outside the us (well, pandora is also available outside the us, but not legally and might be difficult to tune in under certain conditions). Last fm allows you to upload your own stuff as well.
But I have to admit that I was hooked on pandora last year and got some incredible good music. I found one of my now favourite musicians on it: Andrew Bird (from Chicago)
But I have to admit that I was hooked on pandora last year and got some incredible good music. I found one of my now favourite musicians on it: Andrew Bird (from Chicago)
More alternatives (all beta)
www.spool.fm (mediocre sound, allows rew/ff and manual selection of songs, Opera works)
www.musicovery.com (very special GUI, you chose songs by mood and then haggle through a 3D-like tree-structure that connects bands and styles, ok to mediocre sound for free users, premium account needed for better sound, Opera doesn't seem to work)
www.jango.com (ok to good sound, plays songs too slow in IE7, allows manual selection of songs, some problems with Opera, best experience with Firefox)
My current favorite is Jango.
www.spool.fm (mediocre sound, allows rew/ff and manual selection of songs, Opera works)
www.musicovery.com (very special GUI, you chose songs by mood and then haggle through a 3D-like tree-structure that connects bands and styles, ok to mediocre sound for free users, premium account needed for better sound, Opera doesn't seem to work)
www.jango.com (ok to good sound, plays songs too slow in IE7, allows manual selection of songs, some problems with Opera, best experience with Firefox)
My current favorite is Jango.
[This isn't ad spam; check my join date and post count.]pepezabala wrote:last.fm works with a similar concept and is available also outside the us (well, pandora is also available outside the us, but not legally and might be difficult to tune in under certain conditions). Last fm allows you to upload your own stuff as well.
But I have to admit that I was hooked on pandora last year and got some incredible good music. I found one of my now favourite musicians on it: Andrew Bird (from Chicago)
I tried Pandora for a while and actually SUBSCRIBED (and if you knew how cheap I was you'd plotz.) I have discovered many, many new fantastic artists in the genres of pure electronic, ambient, acoustic guitar, new age, etc.
Occasionally in a station it will throw something in that doesn't exactly match the "genome" of that station, on the theory that it may help you discover something new. You can always thumbs down it and it will fade the song out and go on to the next.
The only complaint I have is that when I play it 8 hours a day it does eventually repeat some tunes. But even then you can flag a tune with "don't play this for a month" rather than a permanent thumbs down.
It's a pity that the performance rights orgs have caused it to be shut down outside the US. Pandora (and indeed almost all net radio) almost got put out of business last year IN the US since the government (thanks to the the RIAA of course) was trying to force a law that would require ALL online radio stations to pay additional licensing fees. Even 17 months retroactively (see savenetradio.org for more)
Yeah I love Pandora so much, I sent them an e-mail tellign them how cool I thought they were, and so they sent me a really nice t-shirt! 
Anyway, you guys should check out their "Pandora Presents" podcasts. It's like music appreciation 101, and I found it very entertaining and even educational at times.
There are even episodes that feature electronic music as a genre. Can't wait for the new episodes!
Anyway, you guys should check out their "Pandora Presents" podcasts. It's like music appreciation 101, and I found it very entertaining and even educational at times.
There are even episodes that feature electronic music as a genre. Can't wait for the new episodes!
Before speaking, learn telling. And to tear magic from science is very dumb pupil-like.