Buying and ripping CDs is my way to go. Completely without social media features.
Music
↳ Our family Communities:
➰#Music
Music.world - !music@lemmy.world
Jazz -!jazz@lemmy.world
Album Art Porn - !albumartporn@lemmy.world
Fake Album Covers - !fakealbumcovers@lemm.ee
Obscure Music - !ObscureMusic@lemm.ee
Vinyl and LP's - !vinyl@lemmy.world
Electronic Dance Music - !edm@reddthat.com
60's Music - !60smusic@lemmy.world
70's Music - !70smusic@lemmy.world
80's Music - !80smusic@lemmy.world
90's Music - !90smusic@lemmy.world
The social aspect is talking to the cashier.
They said social media.
Well that's the CD
What even...
That’s so much effort and clutter when you can just download MP3s or FLACs from the web.
Bandcamp because you discover music since albums are so cheap.
Qobuz is good IMHO. I've heard good things about Tidal too.
I left Spotify for TIDAL a couple months ago. No complaints here!
I'm so glad I still just buy and maintain my own local music library.
Same, but I still want some form of a recommendation engine. I also want to discover new music.
I do use Spotify for that as I have a family plan for the family, I have also tried Apple Music. Spotify I tried to seed only with the newest stuff I listen to and Apple Music knows most of what I already listen fo.
Both can work but they are both a lot of work before I come up with something I really want to buy. It's hard to guide them to more obscure stuff, even if you explicitly only train them on that kinda stuff.
I tend to have better luck just with being on subreddits for specific types of music or discussing music with friends. The quality to obscurity ratio can be quite high if a real genre expert shows up and gives a brain dump. Last.fm can be quite useful too.
Bandcamp + Yar har fiddle dee dee + Jellyfin or Plex.
For music something like Navidrome is much better, IMO. But you could easily host it in addition to the former two, not instead.
Oh, and you can combine the subscription to Tidal with yar har by umm... permanently caching the songs offline by means of 3rd party tools. It might seem pointless at first glance, but having the music stored on your server ensures you'll keep having it, while you still can spontaneously explore new stuff on Tidal.
I'd steer away from Plex. Their devs have clearly been headed in the wrong direction. Enshittification inbound.
Obligatory I miss what.cd 🥲
Until jellyfin isn't garbage, and has basic functionality like using a remote compatible interface that's going to be a no dawg. My lifetime membership has been worth its weight in gold.
I feel you on the interface - genuinely. I also got the lifetime... But honestly they are becoming more and more "disconnected" from their roots. The latest ui changes would embarrass a first year art student and make a ui/ux developer weep. As a developer it's infuriating watching the decisions these people make.
Spotify has been on the way to ruin for a while already. The UI is partly Tiktokified/Instagramified.
Tidal is great as far as streaming services go in general.
I hear people saying Tidal is unethical because of where its finding is coming from, and the ties its investors have.
Qobuz seems to be the shit as the next alternative.
I recently cancelled spotify and switched to a selfhosted navidrome server to stream my personal music collection.
I'm using Qobuz for music streaming. It's alright.
Last time I checked they pay artists more than the competition, they curate playlists and editorial content rather than pushing AI left and right, and my experience is generally good.
Minus points for lacking API and native Linux client. On desktop Linux the web app works well.
Deezer is my streamer of choice, nearly identical with artists, OK discovery. Premium includes high def and you can currently stream to multiple devices, like, say, play on sonos for the Kids and listen to yourself without one device stopping
Its funny how people are still using Spotify when other services exist. But yea people, complain about Spotify and it's features.
Edit: if you don't like something quit it, don't complain. Companies don't understand until numbers start dropping.
I went to Spotify from Tidal because Tidal just didn't have the music I wanted to listen to.
I can't see myself wording until there's is a service that just has all music that I'm able to find through Spotify. Sad but true.
I like streaming music, I dont need to own it, but I have been struggling to find a good music streaming service.
I used Spotify for years but the amount of garbage they keep adding made me cancel my subscription. The last straw was when "smart shuffle" kept automatically turning itself back on.
First I switched to YouTube Music but the user experience is honestly trash and I moved on pretty quickly. The separation between video and music service was ridiculously inconsistent.
I used Tidal for a few months and I appreciated the simple UI. However, the recommendations are insanely bad. Not once have I found a new, good track on the daily mix to add to my library, it was driving me crazy.
I started using Qobuz only a few weeks ago. The track radio is honestly pretty bad so far. I start the radio on a lofi track and start hearing video game ambience noises 5 tracks later. Literally bird sounds with whitenoise from an OST album. I havent tried the daily/weekly queue a lot yet, but I hope its decent because I dont know what to try next.
I wish Spotify hadn't entshittified, it had the best recommendations/radios by far but its just not usable for me anymore.
Winamp died because the company that acquired it tried to turn it into an everything app.
Winamp died for our sins :(
Winamp died because pirating music mostly died. That's the only reason.
Winamp died because the jump from 2 to 3 (if memory serves) was a profound hit to system resources... Followed by the dev team apparently fucking off on anything that wasn't optimization (see above for likely reason.)
Add in a dose of music platforms figuring out streaming and you can put the final nail in that coffin.
I'm content with tidal for now. I mainly listen to music on my desktop, and I like that it's just music. No podcasts or things I don't want to see.
It's because we live in late stage capitalism. Our systems require infinite growth, so when Spotify tries to grow in an over saturated market. How else can they increase profits? Throw shit from all over the place to see what works. This issue is why every company jumped on the Ai bandwagon because it was the first real leap in a Market since the internet. Problem is 51% of all money spent in America was spent by the top 10% of the population. That top 10% only needs one Spotify subscription per person. The bottom 90% aren't going to waste money anymore on subscription services.
Try Metrolist for android. I don't know what is available for pc in this manner. And if you're one of the "If buying isn't owning, then pirating isn't stealing" people, then there's option to save the mp3 files from both Spotify's and Deezer's database. Any telegram bot titling this kinda thing will do the job.
Just don't use the feature. Not everything is screech worthy.
That's a fair response to the original post. Made an edit to expound.
My problem with it is that I've never used Spotify messages, yet there's already a few threads on my account with dozens of "messages". My best guess is that the thread tracks unique links that I've sent to friends outside of the app and they've opened while logged in with their accounts. I don't like that.
spotify started with more social media feel
Honestly, Apple Music is not that bad. Tried to love tidal but the app just really sucks with frequent crashes and terrible ui.
Thus far Apple Music feels like old apple playing the streaming game and I have yet to find enshitified features being added. Even the recommendations are more in line with my expectations, think of artists with new or upcoming releases that the app knows you’ve been listening too.
Ui wise I still miss Spotify, it WAS just better. But it’s going further from that everyday. Apple Music also has flac quality if that interests you and you don’t have to pay extra for it. In terms of paying artists, tidal still takes the crown and apple is second.
Never left Pandora. Still works exactly like i set it up. Damn, 15years ago?
Spotify customers created a bigger evil
I had Tidal, but sending music to my home Sonos devices was too much of a pain in my butt so I reverted back to Spotify.