Spyke

Amen. On my phone for now, juggling storage space for flac files.

I'm hanging on for Fiio/ Snowsky to release the next version of the Echo Mini, which I'm crossing my fingers for metal body and removable battery.

1
belgae.social

flac files + navidrome + tempo app on mobile / supersonic on desktop

16
gkak.laₛreply
lemmy.zip

Also I think downloading music from youtube violates their ToS (or sth)

So tech-savvy users should definitely avoid writting a script that uses exportify and yt-dlp to populate their local library

7

Yes. Tech-savvy users should not run a script like the one below from extensions like open-with or similar. Be it on youtube or other music sites.

#!/bin/sh
yt-dlp --extract-audio --embed-metadata --no-playlist \
    --exec 'notify-send "download finished."' \
    -o ~/music/new/"%(album_artist)s - %(artist)s - %(title)s.%(ext)s" \
    -f"bestaudio[ext!=flac][ext!=wav]"\
    -- "$1"
3
pawb.social

Used Spotify until recently, but cancelled my premium subscription after the recent price hike as well as the increasingly prevalent AI content. I'm now trying to build a local library of mp3 files. Not sure if I won't resubscribe to Spotify at some point though, as I find music dicovery quite difficult without it.

13

idk if ListenBrainz has this, but I know for a fact that lastfm has a big discovery function. You can import your spotify listen history and start scrobbling from there, and you're bound to find new artists!

5

Yeah I really hope I can stay off of Spotify but I also could see myself unfortunately going back at some point :(

2

I generally use my ears to listen to music.


Seriously though, between Orpheus, Soulseek, and Bancamp I have a large library and I paid for a Plex pass years ago, so I use Plexamp on mobile and PC. Pretty pleased with it, and it even has scrobbling support for last.fm and support in Maloja+Multi-scrobbler.

11

Large commercial Artists Music is downloaded illegally in various ways. Smaller Artists Music I buy via Bandcamp, Quboz or wherever else they offer it.

All Music is stored as Mp3 and Flac in a Filen Cloud from where I pull selected Titels and Albums onto my phone and into a Musicolet Playlist.

Current musical obession: Turkish Psychedelic Jazz

9

Vinyl and cds. Mostly vinyl. I do stream albums I consider buying in physical form, just to check out if the expense is worth it to me.

6

You might already know this, but yt-dlp has a flag (I believe its --embed-metadata) that will take the album cover, artist/album, etc. and embed it into the mp3. Obviously not as comprehensive as Picard, but might be useful for you!

4

Streaming mostly, with a little vinyl now and then. A little bit of radio but even that's usually streaming over the internet.

Actually, now that I think of it I have a tape I need to run through another tape player to confirm whether the tape is broken, or my tape player is. Bought a Sons of Butcher demo with tracks I haven't seen elsewhere yet (have heard live) at a show a while back, played successfully once and now it doesn't. But I only have one of those kinda shitty vinyl+tape+aux+radio+bluetooth players you see on Amazon around christmas, so it's even odds which is busted.

5

Download via newpipe/ tubular, buy used CDs. I occasionally also use https://www.music-map.com/ to discover new artists.
Dont really have a favorite artist, but im currently listening to a lot of irie revoltes just because i went to a concert of them semi-recently

5

Mostly stuff I bought from Bandcamp. It's drm free, but for convenience I usually let it stream from the app.

I also have a bunch of mp3s from older purchases I listen to sometimes, but I don't have a media server set up so that's mostly limited to my desktop.

Sometimes I'll pull up a specific track on YouTube, but that's mostly for "do you remember this song?" stuff. Adblock and the "resume playback from lock screen" make it bearable.

4

Never streaming or radio. I like to choose what I want, and want uninterrupted play (not reliant on internet), when I want, and often prefer stuff where all or most of the album is good, so I listen mostly in order and almost never shuffle.

Mostly mp3's on whatever works for the device. Phone mp3's, USB for game console and car. Sometimes vinyl. Even record the vinyl's sometimes so I can play the vinyl mix anywhere since vinyl's tend to be mixed differently.

4

I've been collecting vinyl for close to 20 years now. I didn't mean to but bands and labels were just trying to get rid of them in the mid 2000s so I got a dozen or so free records when preordering CDs. About half of them were not on any other format at the time so I got a record player.

So I mostly listen on that when at home or use volumio as a multi room playback system to stream off qobuz or from a local library on my NAS. I did get into cassettes during the pandemic and do find them rather entertaining.

Favorite band is easy, its Guided by Voices. As for why I can't really say except that they rock. You have to be able to see the brilliant uncut pop gems through the lofi tape hiss. Pretty much all their best stuff sounds like a first take demo tape.

4

Tidal, though I've quit payments so when this month runs out I'll switch to try out Qobuz. Before that I was on Spotify since it was invite-only until a few years ago when I had enough of the CEO Daniel Ek complete disrespect for artists that make him a billionaire. Before that I was sailing the seas for many years. Before that I bought CDs. Before that I bought LPs.

4
sopuli.xyz

I listen on Deezer. I know, streaming is awful for the musicians but otherwise I would just pirate songs + I freeload on my friends family plan.

Currently I'm obsessing these artists:

  • Femtanyl (KATAMARI)
  • STOMACH BOOK (Fukouna Girl, Bambi)
  • Danny Brown (Copycats, The End)
  • FEM&M (Beep Beep Beep)
  • Joey & Valence (DROP!!, BUST DOWN)
4

Yeah, I was also "blessed" with this info via that post. Unfortunately, my friend most likely isn't that interested to change, since we also gave Tidal a go before Deezer because it's cheaper and supports artists a bit more, but its music library lacked an immense amount of Japanese artists, which was unusable for all of us. Qobuz apparently has a small library too, which won't work for my friend in practicality.

With our criteria in the streaming business we are basically left off with Spotify or Deezer. Pick your poison situation.

2
sopuli.xyz

I love Amy reference! How did you like it? I'm soon going to start reading it

3
xpeyreply
piefed.social

I'm veeeery extremely biased because ILA ended up becoming our very first connection with my now partner, but I love it soo much. I relate to Amy a lot, and there are a lot of fun characters to explore (and cool ships aside from canon). According to my partner who knows ab this stuff more than I do, there are very little GL media with the kind of ending ILA has, so that's a nice selling point I think.

3
sopuli.xyz

I was already sold by having an unique yandere twist + I haven't read webtoons and it looks reallly cuteeee.

I hope your partner will be the one. It sounds wholesome bonding over ILA :3

3

Yess the artstyle is great I love it.

And thank you, recently had my 1 year anniversary and things are looking amazing for us, I just know they're the one <3

3

Generally I stream music using Qobuz because at least its more ethical than Spotify AFAIK, paying their artists better rates and not (yet) bricking their physical products (Car Thing).

I'll otherwise download music using spotdl and my old Spotify playlists, but I don't enjoy pirating myself. I mainly do this for players without internet like my MP3 player and my car's head unit that only works with iPods or mass storage.

I've been getting into records recently but this is a novelty thing for me.

4
lemmy.world

In my phone you can create a sound profile that equalizes the music to what you can hear using a hearing test. It's a game changer for listening to music day to day, everything sounds better. Even my cheap headphones sound good.

I use youtube music, and it's alright.

3

I dont know what the poster is using, but I just looked for something similar for my Android Phone. I found an app called SoundID that does what they describe, i.e. a hearing test for you and your headphones including an audio preference test. It then did some eq'ing, and that did have a pretty good effect for me. I use the cheapest chinese earbuds off of Temu, but it still did improve the audio for me. Link to the play store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sonarworks.soundid.mobile

1

I would like to listen in an armchair to cd or vinyl through a modest, though still good, stereo speaker system. But my life doesn’t include space or time for any of that.

So - almost 100% streaming, through earbuds, the car speakers, and/or HomePod. There was a time I was on Oink and then What - what put Apple Music to shame. The staff picks were eclectic and amazing and I learned a lot about new to me music styles.

I don’t like listening to music in the background in general, but dance/electronic music is good for background distraction for workouts and focus. But my preference is for classical music - Bach, Beethoven, etc. - depends on my mood. Sometimes I’m in the mood for Queen or Pink Floyd. I’m never in the mood for pop.

3

No streaming. DAP loaded with mp3/flac/m4a/opus from ripped CDs and downloads then I make a few playlists or set random play on the while whole library.

3

I mostly eat soup, or do you drink it?

Is serial a soup? No, its a port.

But why??

3

Recently bought a DAP (Digital Audio Player) and started downloading to distance myself from Spotify’s increasingly intrusive push of AI-riddled music and podcasts. Large commercial artists are torrented, while smaller bands’ music off of bandcamp and qobuz.

I still have my Spotify account to reference songs that I’ve bookmarked, but since I ended my subscription I no longer use it frequently enough to discover new music as I detest ads. Now I discover new music throughs combination of falling down youtube rabbit holes, and browsing various lemmy communities, /c/[email protected] (I forget how to link communities. I’m also considering checking out last.fm and other music services like that.

Bands I've been enjoying lately:

I'm also looking forward to purchasing the new Paper Kites album when it releases in January. :)

3
lemmy.dbzer0.com

On the phone I use Metro, from f-droid. At home I like to play the few vinyls I have from time to time.

3
Axolotlreply
feddit.it

A fellow metrolist user, do you download music too? I found that it cut the batterry usage by a LOT

2

These days, I avoid Spotify, or anything else with their ridiculous advertisements. I used to pay for Spotify but they charge so much for paying so little to the artists that I didn't want to support them anymore. Not to mention that I truly dislike this algorithmic world we live in, where things are "recommended" for me, but it's part of an endless conveyer belt of things being sent my way when I didn't ask for it.

I'm working on getting a record player so I can just intentionally play the music I want. I also like the physicality of it. It feels easier to dive into the artist's vision of the album as a full experience.

3

I used to use Spotify, but got tired of the bullshit they were doing. Now I run my own navidrome server and use feishin for desktop and Symfonium for mobile.

3

Currently rip my CDs and then listen on my phone/PC as digital music. I also pirate music from artist I find problematic to avoid supporting them, and pirate old music I used to listen to which I plan to purchase later (not really in the position to buy all the music I've listened for free in my whole life, plus I feel like I've streamed them enough to support them, so I don't feel that guilty). My partner has vinyl records, so sometimes I listen to that, too. Also the ocassional concert when I can afford it, of course, I need that sweet live music.

My current favorite band... Probably Twenty One Pilots? I don't listen to a lot of bands lol, I mostly listen to solo artists, in which case my favorite artist is by far Ren.

I like Twenty One Pilots because they're like everything teen me would've loved. Specially a fan of Self Titled / NPI era. Raw garage-tier songs about your problems with God, and faith overall? Sign me tf in, I've had quite the history with religion.

And I like Ren because of his hard-to-label music style from song to song, while so very clearly being a Ren song, with all of his theatrics, lyricism, life struggles, cynisism, and a splash of religion. I've been following him for a while and it's amazing to see so far he's come.

Speaking of Ren and Twenty One Pilots... They're playing at a festival together next year (REN BARELY PLAYS LIVE)... And I can't fucking attend because it's in another continent. fuck me.

3

Stored tunes on my phone via BT headphones.

Source: I have downloaded music through a torrent, I haven't done this for many years.

Mostly, I find music on Youtube and download that with an Android frontend such as PipePipe.

3

PipePipe can download videos as m4a or opus files in various bitrates. There are channels that play copy right free music on Youtube. Think of podcasts, they are typically audio but can be found on Youtube with a static background.

1

I buy vinyl for older albums (or current favourite artists I follow that release LPs), and all my digital purchases are through Bandcamp. I host everything (flac or mp3 files) on a Navidrome server and stream from that.

3

Anymore there are a few songs on yt that I listen to that I haven't downloaded. Otherwise it's mostly all local files on my devices. File type varies.

Otherwise, I have a bunch of CDs that I can either play using my desktop or battery hog of an old Discman. Pros for desktop is I have access to my higher quality bluetooth headphones and can move and do other things whole listening. Pros for the CD player is I have an old pair of 90s in ear Sony headphones that came with it.

Couldn't tell you a particular group for a favorite band right now since I've been listening to a fair bit of 90s ( basically all my CDs ) when it comes to most of the band music I've been listening to.

3

I love local media, especially vinyl, cassettes, and CDs. When they're not available, however, I'll listen to Sirius (Lithium!) or YTM or my local library of mp3s.

2

Always FLAC, I have 2 DAPs, Sony walkman and Hiby, Hiby is better, I rip my CDs and put the FLAC files in my DAPs, I also use streaming through qobuz when I'm in my laptop.

2

I like to change it up. I'll listen to USBs on my stereo, or on my phone with earphones. I listen to USBs which have mp3s from all over the place, YouTube, Radio Garden, and regular radio (on a stereo where you have to manually tune it to a station). I'm constantly unearthing new music, and music that's new to me.

2

In order of percentage time spent

Streaming service (probably about half the time), Radio (maybe about 20%), Vinyl (say 15%), legal downloads and dubious legality via Plex (about equally 5%)

Some of what I listen to is kinda niche I guess, so I like to support the artist with a purchase (vinyl or Bandcamp download) where I can

Edit: typo

2
slrpnk.net

mostly mp3s, but I also use iBroadcast to stream my personal library on other devices

favorite band is The Magnetic Fields, favorite album 69 Love Songs, favorite song "100,000 Fireflies"

2

I mostly use Apple Music because I have it and it’s easy access to a huge catalog of artists. I started using a little cheap MP3 player in my car that’s loaded with old Punk o Rama compilation albums, some ripped from my own collection, but many were downloaded because they are hard to find now.

I found a bunch of good bands at my library, so I checked the cds out and ripped them to my PC. I also frequent thrift stores for cheap books and cds. I’m slowly learning how to set up my own home network and I’d like to stream my own stuff on the go, but I have a lot to learn before that.

My favorite band is Green Day. I fell in love with them when I was 10 and heard them on the radio in the early 90s. They were my introduction to punk music and were my lifeline during some really rough parts of my life. I survived because of the 1039 smooth album and Star Wars Pod Racer on N64.

2
  • Spotify for social and casual listening
  • Tidal for curated personal music listening time
  • brain.fm and endel for background music
  • youtube music for rare finds
  • youtube premium for tv music like tiny desk concerts and party tv
  • mp3 through bone conducting earphones for workout, especially water sports. I try not to take my phone to avoid distractions.
2

I have my music on my nextcloud instance and nextcloud music app and stream it on my phone using any ampache client

2

Generally Spotify but I’m looking to ditch it for another similar services bc I can’t take their crap anymore (fucking YouTube kid like feature I cannot block, audiobooks…). I insist on paying so that eventually, even if only a portion of, I pay artists. Also I have yet to find alternatives for finding new / matching songs.

On the side I recently acquired a record player. I like to have a physical media. Makes music more tangible for the kids as well. Make us listen to whole albums as well so it’s a different take than what Spotify offers.

2

Streaming. Mostly YouTube music, some Bandcamp, all legal. Headphones at work, speakers at home. Favorites are many, old and new music, last couple of years it's been Fontaines DC I think, they are just so good, sitting at the intersection of rock & punk & melodic with such awesomely poetic lyrics and the underlying thread of despair of all Irish music.

2

Setup: Tidal through USB Audio Player on my Samsung Galaxy S23 with an Audioquest DragonFly Cobalt DAC and Sennheiser IE 900 headphones.

Why: because I can taste the sound in my mouth

Some favorites: Erutan, Diana Panton, The Ink Spots, The 8-Bit Big Band, Dir en grey, Eluveitie, Aimer, Paramore, Shiina Ringo, Tokyo Jihen, Yorushika

2

I have a big collection of Creative Commons songs. And I wrote a little web music player to stream from my home-server, which I use for listening when I'm working from home, since I didn't want to install a music player on my work laptop..

2

Primarily streaming, although I have a digital media player loaded with tons of FLACs that I use when I'm out and about or in the garden.

I also have a growing record collection of about 100 or so records so I do listen to a lot of records when I'm home.

I don't really have a favourite band, it changes depending on what I feel like but currently I've been listening to

  • Thornhill
  • Gojira
  • King gizzard and the lizard wizard
  • Tool
  • Animals as leaders
  • Smashing pumpkins
  • Catslash
  • Lorn
  • Fcukers
1

CDs I bought, the massive trove of albums I've ripped from friends and library CDs since around 1997 and everything dl'd from Spotify and more recently Tidal (switched not only because ethics and quality - mostly because spotify-dl started breaking up :o) now lives on my home server, backs up once a week and is available to grooving to via Jellyfin over the Net. So much debt of gratitude to Jellyfin for enabling this.

At home I'll plug the phone into a USB Toslink box and play lossless over the speakers; in the car over Bluetooth into car stereo (which has seen a little bespoke work). Headphones I haven't bought into, I'd rather be in the moment with all senses when out and about. Same goes for motorcycle riding, music is too much of a distraction.

New music comes along by following Pitchfork's album reviews. They are pushed out to RSS so that I browse them over morning coffee.

There is no such thing as a favourite band when one really listens to music. I get kicks from still discovering new stuff at a ripe age. One newish band that blew my mind is black midi.

1

Used to be Spotify, now Tidal. Would prefer Qobuz, but it's significantly more expensive on the family tier.

Usually on headphones, og on HEOS via tidal connect - or, I would have preferred that, but it's super broken, so now from the tidal integration (not connect) on a wiiim...

1

I have an assorted collection of CD rips, digital downloads and files acquired through ahem other means. At home I have a NAS which keeps those files (99% of them are 44.1/16 FLACs, the rest are also FLACs in other resolutions/bit depths). On my own computer I listen to those files through foobar2000 and on my work one (since it's a bit more limited in what I can install) I use Navidrome and its web player. Hadware-wise I have an ADI-2 DAC FS that powers either an HD 600 or a pair of HS8 speakers. I don't do any mixing/mastering, but I've grown to like neutral-leaning sound. On the go I rely on the same Navidrome instance backing Symfonium running on an Android phone hooked up to a Retro Nano and IE-200. For a very long time I was avoiding Bluetooth, but turns out that this combo, at least with my previous phone, sounds significantly better than the same IEMs hooked directly to the headphone out of the phone (and running a wired DAC was a pain because it was constantly dropping out); my current phone doesn't have a headphone out at all, and generally, even if there's a quality loss over Bluetooth, it would be negligeable in the city noise I usually have to listen in, plus it's cumbersome having a cable attached to my phone when I'm trying to do other stuff with it.

I gave up the idea of having everything offline on the go (although it still is at home); it's not feasible to have to look for a phone with 1 TB of storage, and with the current one I can set up favourites so that at least a section of my library is cached on the phone and not relying on an Internet connection. Other than that it's nice to not rely on any external services or subscriptions - everything is my own equipment managed by me.

As for the CDs I have, they're mostly bought at shows, so hopefully a big chunk of the money goes directly to the artists; I also buy T-shirts and other merch. I also like Bandcamp, especially on Bandcamp Fridays since all the money goes to the artists, but something tells me that they've been trying to compensate through shipping rates - shipping a t-shirt and a CD shouldn't cost more than parts for a complete bike (speaking from experience).

Music-wise, I can't name one single band, but lately I've been into New Model Army (saw them live - they were brilliant), Converge (stoked about the upcoming album), All Them Witches, Tragedy, Aesop Rock.

1

Local media from PC with headphones usually. Otherwise from my phone in my car from local media or my DAP with headphones.

1

My music library on my PC, often SoundCloud, in phases YouTube Music, or online radio streams.

I pretty much always have music running, unless I actively do something that has relevant audio.

1

Records, cds, bandcamp, nas, some reels of old stuff (expensive now but so much fun), internet archive.

My reel of S&G is one of the best sounding things ive heard as far as depth and realism. A lot of newer stuff lacks that and is fatigue inducing (and brickwalled) so I have to look hard for good music today.

A few cassettes but apart from the fun of them, the sound is of course awful. Im a realistic audiophile but cassettes dont and cannot sound good lol

Favorite band/group...id be here all day discussing that.

1

For algorithmic discovery, I use Spotube with the Listenbrainz library backend using their discover playlists. Sometimes I listen to playlists associated with communities I'm in, which are on Spotify so I also use Spotube. For offline listening I use Qobuz, although their DRM has broken it occasionally when I needed it so I want to switch that to Spotube as well once they improve their offline functionality and fix related bugs, or set up Navidrome.

1

Mostly Spotify, almost 80000 minutes listened this year. Also YouTube premium for full recorded sets, and music on an external drive for content not on Spotify.

Radiohead and Carbon Based Lifeforms are my favorite bands.

1
lemmy.zip

Spotify, though I'm not thrilled about it.

Until there's a pirate streaming/download service that recommends similar songs/artists, I don't think I'll switch.

RIP Spotube :(

0

FM radio.

To be honest, I mostly don't listen to music. I do have a subscription to Spotify but I don't really use it. I'm not cancelling it because I'm on a Duo plan with my dad and he uses it a lot, really getting his money's worth.

So the only time I do listen to music is while driving, and then I just turn on the radio. (I also don't drive very often, I mostly use public transport.)

0

revanced youtube music. i started collecting stuff in a youtube playlist a long time ago, and at this point i't be quite a hassle to switch, so i always put it off. also, you can't really beat the simplicity of discovering a song through the algorithm and instantly having available on all devices without having to faff around with downloading it to a selfhosted insert service

0
neo2478reply
sh.itjust.works

Please consider more ethical alternatives like Qobuz. Spotify is a terrible company for many reasons, including being the worst at paying artists.

5