Awful.
Asklemmy
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I follow a bunch of hash tags on Mastodon.
I've been paying for a Pandora subscription for about a decade. Worth it. (Piracy is a service problem.)
Their recommendations for similar bands, auto play, and making stations from a band or song has let me discover so much music over the years.
Sorry, but Spotify Discover Weekly of course.
And I also always have Shazam ready to go for when out and about.
I don't use Spotify anymore, but I miss Discover Weekly. When it missed, it really missed, but I still found a lot of artists through it.
Spotify daylist (search for it). Better than discover weekly imo, and changes multiple times during the day.
Didn't know, thx for that. I was complaining about discover weekly cause it's too long between refreshes.
I just started using the AI playlist as an alternative. You can give prompts "Like this playlist, bands I never heard" or "New bands only". The 2-3 times I've used it worked alright, the songs were quite fitting the prompt. I just didn't hear any bangers in there so I don't know what to think about it.
A simple combination of Spotify, searching for recommendations, as in "artists similar to _____," checking out AllMusic for a brief overview and maybe which album to start with.
Formerly through TikTok and YouTube, but now only SoundCloud (especially through Daily drops) and Bandcamp.
At the moment? Watching Anime. A few years ago? Watch music videos of songs I already know on youtube and see what the algorithm spits out.
Yoasobi slaps.
Talk to other music nerd friends, sift through the algorithmic recommendations of spotify/ whatever, browse music forums that match my tastes, use a song identifier to catch random ones in public...
There are lots of ways to find new tunes in 2024. I mostly listen to albums rather than individual tracks so hearing one good song usually leads to several from the same album/ep/lp
Theuppermostinlife curates a bunch of music they like, and I share some of their taste so that's where I get a bunch of new stuff from.
Mostly through movies/tv shows or sometimes NPR Tiny Desk
checking out random stuff I see on Rate Your Music or going to shows at small local venues.
College radio
I started a Facebook group called New Music Only. Nothing older than a fortnight is allowed. It allows others to share brand new music they haye found and it forced me to go to YouTube and start hunting for recently uploaded music so I can supply material for the group.
Bandcamp Features
Nts.live Internet Radio made by music nerds and I love it
I watch a new anime and the op/ed is a banger
College radio
KEXP baby!!
I listen to the playlists Apple Music makes me each week. Discovered tons of stuff
I just listen to a lot of Triple J
Community radio, my kids (and they find music through me too), YouTube music recommendations, opening bands at concerts, and sometimes NPR.
Through my Apple Music βNew Musicβ weekly playlist before I canceled my subscription. It does a good job so long as you actively love and dislike tracks.
Now I have a local library that syncs with last.fm for every play and you can discover new music and artists through there.
Iβm no longer on it but instagram was actually a great way to discover new artists. Seems that meta will be a significant player in the music industry (major UMG deal) soon as well so who knows whatβs coming there.
Youtube nprs tiny desk concert. Got so many banger musicians and GREAT music.
I suppose it depends on your tastes, but I read Pitchfork reviews and check out the artits on Spotify. I do not limit my tastes to one genre, so that makes it more interesting when exploring. I'll also leverage the Related Artists section of an artist's page if I find a new artist that I like.
I used to use r/listentothis, haven't in a long time though, not even out of "fuck you reddit" just busy I think.
Bandcamp follows and whatever is playing on CBC music.