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Music Recommendation Engines Compared

An anonymous reader writes "The music recommendation/music discovery space seems to be heating up this year. Two big recent features on music recommendation engines: ExtremeTech has a round-up and reviews of eight leading services. Of the eight, Last.fm emerges as the winner: "Last.fm is by far the best out there, possessing a huge library of music, a great community, and a recommendation feature that will blow you away." Meanwhile, Pitchforkmedia.com just ran an in-depth feature about the hows and whys of music recommendation software, that tells the story going back to the '90s, and interviews people at Last.fm, Pandora, MusicIP, and the startup Echo Nest: '"Our hope is to answer every possible question about music that ever existed. If we can pull that off, then I think we're doing very well," says [Brian] Whitman.'"

11 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. I've tried lastfm and Pandora by yagu · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've tried the two top recommended music recommend-ers: last.fm, and Pandora. Love them both.

    I had to futz with the last.fm ergonomics, and find if I haven't used it in a while, I have to re-figure some of the stuff out. I find that annoying. But, it has great features, great recommendations, and features.

    Pandora, I found to be easier to use, simpler and more elegant in design. I especially like the "sharing" of your personal stations, and love the "most popular" station feature. This is a great site, and a great experience.

    For Pandora, though they've talked about fixing it, and I don't know where they are on this, I was disappointed to not be able to create a Classical Music station. That's a pretty big negative for me.

    (Also, if you try Pandora, an odd behavior: if you click the "Minimize" button in the Pandora window (not the browser minimizer), it pops out into its own independent window. That's hardly "minimizing", though I find it convenient.)

    And, while these may be free services, they've ended up costing me a small fortune. I've been exposed to so much cool music I'd not heard, I've ended up buying about 20 CDs I'd never have otherwise bought.

  2. Re:Independent music recommendation services? by alfs+boner · · Score: 3, Informative

    cdbaby has a useful genre/category/mood browser.

    --
    Listen p*ssy. I'm sure your the same homo that posted earlier about alf's boner and you just want to remain anonymous fo
  3. Last.fm is nice by SubRosa · · Score: 2, Informative

    Any service that supports not only FreeBSD, but native amd64 binaries of their client deserves some major kudos. When I get tired of my regular playlists, I tune into last.fm for some fresh stuff, and it does a mostly decent job.

    --
    Better living through obfuscation. Project White Noise
  4. Last.fm is opensource by presentt · · Score: 2, Informative

    I like using Last.fm because it's player is open-source and available for both Linux and WinXP. For me, that's critical, because I dualboot my PC between those two OSs, and have my music on a separate partition that's accessible by both.

    I'm not sure if that's the case with the other services, but I've been happy with Last.fm

    --
    I decided to stop stealing cynical quotes to use as a signature line.
  5. Re:But can you answer this one? by leonmergen · · Score: 4, Informative

    You obviously aren't familliar with the sites recommended, Pandora and Last.fm ... the trick with these services is that you decide what you listen to (for example, in Last.fm's case, you can listen to similar artists of, for example, Britney Spears - they will probably serve you a nice mixture of Christina, Destiny's Child, Shakira, etc... they do this based on data mining, which only works if you have a subscriber base as large as Last.fm... one point which Pandora seems to lack a bit (chicken or the egg problem)

    And well, as far as I'm concerned, Last.fm's radio service is pretty high quality.. they offer you an option to subscribe to, among other things, get a guarantee for being able to listen to a radio station (if a server is full, a non-subscriber gets kicked off to make place for you)...

    You should try it out... everyone who enjoys music recommendations and discovering new music will like these services...

    --
    - Leon Mergen
    http://www.solatis.com
  6. Re:iTunes playlists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    It would be awesome if I could export a playlist from iTunes and upload it to a site and have it make recommendations based on that, rather than having to manually type in artists & songs. Anyone know of any services that accept that kind of input?
    Last.fm. Well, kind of. If you use the Audioscrobbler plugin, it send the details of the tracks you play in iTunes to the Last.fm servers to use when determining your personal station and when giving recommendations.
  7. Hello from Last.fm by captainclever · · Score: 5, Informative

    So, seeing as I work at Last.fm (I founded audioscrobbler), I feel obliged to pimp my last.fm journal, which has some interesting stats (imo) about which media players are most popular, and some graphs of artist popularity. I intend to do a "google trends for music" interface after the next site update (see below).

    The KDE player Amarok is getting increasingly popular, which is nice to see. I use it myself; the built in support means no plugin is required. The next version of amarok adds lots more last.fm integration too.

    Coming up - we'll be running a beta test of a fairly major update to last.fm towards the end of june, and going live with the new version 1st July.

    And a random stat: we currently recieve on average 104 submissions per second from audioscrobbler plugins.

    --
    Last.fm - join the social music revolution
    1. Re:Hello from Last.fm by levell · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you're a Linux user but you prefer Gnome to KDE, Rhythmbox also has AudioScrobbler integration and the ability to play last.fm streams is currently being worked on

      --
      Struggling to find a day everyone can make? WhenShallWe.com
  8. Re: Progarchives by stuffduff · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yeah http://www.progarchives.com/ is good! So are http://www.gepr.net/ and http://www.gnosis2000.net/. And if you have your ten league boots on (and lots and lots of energy) try http://www.nearfest.com/. Rest up before the trip & plan a long recovery after. With two bands Friday at the Progressive Legends Showcase, and five (yes five) bands/artists both Saturday and Sunday it can really take a toll.

    --
    "Can there be a Klein bottle that is an efficient and effective beer pitcher?"
  9. Re:Independent music recommendation services? by joshsteadmon · · Score: 5, Informative

    RIAA Radar will list non-RIAA albums that are similar to any given album you search for. I've used it a few times and it's always given me good results.

  10. iRATE by McDutchie · · Score: 2, Informative

    Anyone else using iRATE? For some reason it isn't listed in the article, but I've been using it for years and it's the best way I've found to (legally) get free tracks from the web and get new ones you like based on how you've rated previous ones.