I think that there are enough of people on the Internet which like to listen to music online. For this purpose the services MOG, Pandora and Spotufy are the most suitable.
Between these services there are enough features
and a variety of tunes to satisfy almost everyone.
But which is the best, and for what? Let's take a look.
Pandora is a US-only automated radio and recommendation service. Their service is built around the Music Genome Project, in which any given song is represented by a list of 400 attributes ("genes") of musical characteristics. When a song is presented to a Pandora user, they can indicate whether they like it with a thumbs up or down, and the service takes that into account for future recommendations.
Pandora has Apple and Android app versions, and has two subscription options: free with advertisements and a 40-hour cap, and paid.
Pros: We've found the recommendations system works really well, and have even discovered some new favorite bands that way. The service plays you types of songs you'll like in any genre you want, so it's a good way to explore. The preset radio stations are also worth a look.
Cons: Can't control which songs you listen to, which is a bummer if you really do just want to hear one artist or album and not similar types of music. If you listen to the service every day for a while, songs start to repeat, or recommendations get a little wonky (along the lines of playing Disney radio stars near the end of a hip hop mix).
Spotify is a Europe-only music streaming service with a wide variety of music from major and independent labels. Currently they offer about 13 million tracks, with about 10,000 added each day.
Spotify has free and paid subscription options, and plays through a dedicated player available on every OS as well as Android and Apple phones (with a premium account).
Pros: We have been massively impressed by the sheer amount of music available on this service; Spotify has just about every track you'd ever want to listen to. They also have a really great playlist-making and -sharing setup, which is as easy as copy and pasting a link. Playlists can also be edited by groups of people.
Cons: Obviously being Europe-only (and only Sweden, Spain, Norway, Finland, France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom at that) is problematic. This worked for us while we were traveling back and forth between continents a lot, because logging in from a European IP lasts for about two weeks before it checks where you are again. Supposedly they're going to release in the US some time in 2011.
There are some other problems with content restriction from record company licensing, and they've recently announced free users won't be able to listen to as many tracks as before, or as many times.
MOG is a paid subscription and social music service. MOG has no regional restriction as far as we're aware, and because it's paid there are no ads. The music catalogue is 10 million songs so far, and includes full albums. Users can either queue songs and albums, or listen to more from the same or similar artists.
Subscriptions are $5/month for web and Roku channel access, and $10/month for listening through those as well as apps. Users can download songs to the app for offline listening. New users get a 14 day free trial.
Pros: MOG seems to be the best of the Pandora and Spotify worlds; listen to whomever you want and when, and build playlists like Spotify offers, or have slightly-less-accurate-than-Pandora radio-listening options.
Cons: If you're willing to fork out the cash, it's a pretty good deal, but paid still has a hard time standing up to free. Similar artists can be a bit random at times.
(material from apartmenttherapy.com)
Music Paradise
Music Go Round
Music and Arts
Music Lyrics
But which is the best, and for what? Let's take a look.
Pandora is a US-only automated radio and recommendation service. Their service is built around the Music Genome Project, in which any given song is represented by a list of 400 attributes ("genes") of musical characteristics. When a song is presented to a Pandora user, they can indicate whether they like it with a thumbs up or down, and the service takes that into account for future recommendations.
Pandora has Apple and Android app versions, and has two subscription options: free with advertisements and a 40-hour cap, and paid.
Pros: We've found the recommendations system works really well, and have even discovered some new favorite bands that way. The service plays you types of songs you'll like in any genre you want, so it's a good way to explore. The preset radio stations are also worth a look.
Cons: Can't control which songs you listen to, which is a bummer if you really do just want to hear one artist or album and not similar types of music. If you listen to the service every day for a while, songs start to repeat, or recommendations get a little wonky (along the lines of playing Disney radio stars near the end of a hip hop mix).
Spotify is a Europe-only music streaming service with a wide variety of music from major and independent labels. Currently they offer about 13 million tracks, with about 10,000 added each day.
Spotify has free and paid subscription options, and plays through a dedicated player available on every OS as well as Android and Apple phones (with a premium account).
Pros: We have been massively impressed by the sheer amount of music available on this service; Spotify has just about every track you'd ever want to listen to. They also have a really great playlist-making and -sharing setup, which is as easy as copy and pasting a link. Playlists can also be edited by groups of people.
Cons: Obviously being Europe-only (and only Sweden, Spain, Norway, Finland, France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom at that) is problematic. This worked for us while we were traveling back and forth between continents a lot, because logging in from a European IP lasts for about two weeks before it checks where you are again. Supposedly they're going to release in the US some time in 2011.
There are some other problems with content restriction from record company licensing, and they've recently announced free users won't be able to listen to as many tracks as before, or as many times.
MOG is a paid subscription and social music service. MOG has no regional restriction as far as we're aware, and because it's paid there are no ads. The music catalogue is 10 million songs so far, and includes full albums. Users can either queue songs and albums, or listen to more from the same or similar artists.
Subscriptions are $5/month for web and Roku channel access, and $10/month for listening through those as well as apps. Users can download songs to the app for offline listening. New users get a 14 day free trial.
Pros: MOG seems to be the best of the Pandora and Spotify worlds; listen to whomever you want and when, and build playlists like Spotify offers, or have slightly-less-accurate-than-Pandora radio-listening options.
Cons: If you're willing to fork out the cash, it's a pretty good deal, but paid still has a hard time standing up to free. Similar artists can be a bit random at times.
(material from apartmenttherapy.com)
You may also
like:
Music Theory Music Paradise
Music Go Round
Music and Arts
Music Lyrics
No comments:
Post a Comment