Spyke

Oh yeah, I remember listening to that when they only had around 5 episodes

They still do the high-pitched beep when you start or stop I see haha

Thank you

1

No one mentioned lofi girl? The youtube channel's study stream is amazing for helping me focus on coding.

7

I was scrolling furiously trying to find a mention of lofi girl 😆. What a great thread though, really curious to listen to some of these suggestions!

I’ve been buying lofi girl tracks and building my own collection of coding music from Bandcamp. (https://lofigirl.bandcamp.com/)

Helps support the music creators and I can customize my soundscape to suit the coding task at hand.

1

I don't really like thinking about what to listen to, so I use di.fm (an internet radio for electronic music) and just enjoy the endless stream of music. Some of my favorite channels:

  • Electro Swing - my absolute favorite, energetic and fast but improves focus
  • LoFi Hip-Hop - like the popular YouTube mixes but better curated and higher-quality
  • Liquid DnB - this is the middle ground between relaxing LoFi and energetic "Matrix" style coding music

It was really hard to find music I enjoy but I can also concentrate while listening to it. These 3 channels have been the absolute best for me in this regard. I hope you will like them too.

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programming.dev

After years of trying different genres I found the best music for me: instrumental metal.

My go to artists are:

  • Andromida, for something hardcore
  • God is an Astronaut, for something melodic and chill
  • Outrun the Sunlight, TANK86, Modern day Babylon for the times when I want to listen to something else
  • anything that Spotify recommends

And my recent discovery: The HU. Mongolian band playing a mix of folk/rock/metal with a lot of throat singing. Since I don't understand Mongolian and throat singing is very uncommon for me, I just treat it as another instrument, and it can easily get me in the zone.

4
programming.dev

Nice suggestions! If you want something chill, I recommend David Maxim Micic or Plini. If you want something more technical, Polyphia and Intervals are all amazing.

3
Threenreply
aussie.zone

Wow there is a lot there! Thank you

I will listen to a few at work this week

2
ruffslreply
programming.dev

On that note (haha 🎶), I enjoy the "Pop Goes Classical" playlist on Spotify if I want to listen to something familiar and recent in pop culture, but played using classical instruments without distracting lyrics:

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DWUPafHP1BJw1?si=k5VFZi7uR7WCpPamvEKneg

If it's something original like Mozart or Vivaldi, I get too enthralled with the classical scores, so backgrounding pop melodies over piano or string instruments is a compromise.

2

I have 2 categories, either Classical Music ( actually my preferred classical programming music is The Legend of Zelda: Concert 2018 by Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, and I'm not entirely sure it qualify as "Classical" ) or 80-style hard rock (Like the soundtrack for Peacemaker)

3

Yeah ive listened to the frozen synapse ost a bunch, especially a functioning god. Ill check out dune

2
pec
sh.itjust.works

Is there a genre that's similar to that but instead of being relaxing it's energizing? I love the isolation that music provides but acerbate my daydreaming tendencies higher frequency beats would be better but it often includes distracting beat drops or sudden track changes

3

In addition to LoFi that others have recommended, I'd also suggest Chillstep. Chillstep is mellow, rhythmic, but without all the artificial scratchs and pops common in LoFi.

This is a playlist I tried to replicate from memory of the playlists I loved to listen to back before Google bought and closed down Songza, a curated music streaming platform:

BTW, if anyone could provide a better genre classification of this playlist, or similar albums/artists, I'd be grateful! I had to piece this together from sampling song radio suggestions and auditory recall, as I can't recall names, nor bothered to make note of them when auto playing from Songza back in the day.

2

On Spotify I often listen to "Dance Covers", it is a mix of known songs with a higher bpm or increased base.

It has the perfect beat range for my taste :)

2

Aphex Twin for me.

Something about those snare rushes just tickles my brain the right way and helps me to focus.

2

Listening to instrumental metal is a fantastic way to stay focused during coding sessions! To enhance your productivity even further, consider integrating tech tools like using Google Meet for telehealth consultations. Whether managing work-life balance or scheduling quick virtual checkups, it’s a game-changer for staying connected while maintaining your health and focus. Plus, artists like Andromida and God is an Astronaut perfectly complement a productive work atmosphere!

1

I tend to rewatch TV shows I've seen before in a quarter tile of my screen. Gives me that background noise and doesn't really distract me from work as I've seen the episodes before.

When I get bored of that, I like to fire up an EDM set on Youtube. An Armin Van Buuren set or something.

1

I mainly listen to classical music. Mainly clarinet concertos, because I just happen to have a lot of them.

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Programming Music | Spyke