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Posts Tagged ‘Spotify’

Spotiguide website launches

January 12th, 2010

This week I’m officially launching Spotiguide.

Spotiguide is a brand new website that helps you get more from Spotify with the latest music, news, technology, tips and tools.

The aim is to make Spotify even better, with a hand-picked selection of the best new and classic music to help you navigate Spotify’s huge catalogue, and regular beginners and advanced tools and tips to make Spotify even easier to use.

Spotiguide will also bring you the latest Spotify news, and reviews of Spotify-related technology, such as Spotify-compatible phones.

Check it out at www.spotiguide.com.

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Spotify for the iPhone – hooray!

July 27th, 2009

And lo, the music industry was revolutionised: Spotify has completed its iPhone app.

“We’ve finally completed work on the Spotify app for the iPhone and sent it over to the nice people at Apple,” says Spotify. “The application should be available in a few weeks for premium subscribers.”

As the video explains, the app has pretty much all of the Spotify features we we know and love. As hinted at previously, it features an offline playlist function, which syncs playlisted tracks to your iPhone allowing you to listen without being online.

It’s this offline mode that makes the Spotify app a potential iTunes killer. Why bother downloading a track if you can stream it and cache it on your phone? Despite the potential damage the app could do to iTunes downloads, Apple is likely to give it the thumbs-up, safe in the knowledge that the Spotify app will drive more users towards the iPhone. Of course, the Spotify app won’t be an iPhone exclusive – Android and S60 versions are unlikely to be far away.

For Spotify, the launch of the iPhone app will mean a huge boost in revenue. The app will be free, but users will need to upgrade to a premium Spotify account at £9.99 per month. The vast majority of Spotifiers are currently using ad-supported free accounts, but it always seemed unlikely that an ad-supported model alone could support the company. With millions of paying subscribers jumping aboard, Spotify’s future will look a whole lot more secure.

As for the artists and record companies, the (small) amount they are paid per play seems unlikely to rise, and the app seems certain to negatively affect download sales. Some artists won’t like it, and will try to pull their music from the service. But this is the future of music delivery, and those that don’t like it are going to have to lump it.

I originally wrote about the death of the download in January.

If you don’t already have one, here’s a post on the cheapest way to get an iPhone.

If you’re waiting for the Spotify app to appear for your Nokia or other brand of smartphone, here’s how to listen to Spotified music on your smartphone via Last.fm.

More Spotify stuff:
Five ways to make Spotify even better
Can Spotify save the album format?
Where is Beatles band on Spotify?

Music, Technology

Death to all music compilations

June 10th, 2009

If the ad breaks between consistently rubbish summer TV shows are anything to go by, music compilation CDs are this season’s must-have items. And, boy, are they getting the hard sell.

There’s another Bruce Springsteen compilation. Cat Stevens’ best of is, apparently, ‘one of the best compilations ever!’ The Very Best of Don Henley features Boys of Summer and, erm, you know, all his other best stuff…

I hate commercial compilation CDs (got to love homemade ones, though). In the digital age they are a redundant concept. Pre-digital, they did fill a need. Like a couple of songs by one particular artist, and keen to dip into the back catalogue without buying all the albums? Before the internet, would need to pick up a compilation CD (or, indeed, an LP or cassette). You’d accept that fact that there’d be a few tracks you didn’t like, and a few of your favourites would be missing, and the track order might be a bit annoying – because there was nothing you could do about it.

Now you make your own compilations. You go to Spotify or iTunes and you compile a playlist or download all your favourite tracks and arrange them in a sensible order (always chronological, I’m saying!). You can burn a CD if you need one, tweaking it for individual friends or parties or car journeys. You are in control, and you get exactly what you want. Your personal version of the Very Best of Don Henley ends up with a much shorter running time.

The record companies seem to have realised that time is running out to peddle their officially-compiled compilations. I quite like Cat Stevens, but can the Best of Cat Stevens really be considered one of the best compilations ever? There are five or six great songs on there, but there are at least as many that only the most devout Yusuf Islam fan could describe as anything other than bloody awful.

And pity all the Dads who get Don Henley’s CD for Father’s Day on account of whistling Boys of Summer once within earshot of an offspring, and then have to appear grateful while subjecting their ears to the album’s other 12 tracks of turgidly forgettable soft rock.

Polydor have bought text ads on Amazon: ‘Celebrate the career of a legend with The Very Best Of Don Henley.’ Who is this legend, and how can we be confident that he or she would like to celebrate their career with a 92-percent rubbish Don Henley CD?

Back catalogue sales make up a huge portion of record company turnover, but they need to accept that the way we consume music has changed forever. No longer can they trawl the archives every year for another batch of artists to revive courtesy of a best of CD. Pre-selected compilations are going to die out in the very near future.

The ad for Bruce Springsteen’s new best of CD helpfully advises that it is also available as a download. But why would anyone bother to download a pre-selected compilation, when they can download their favourite tracks individually and compile their own compilation? Bruce’s new Greatest Hits is essentially a re-ordered version of his last Greatest Hits, and it’s obviously very good, but it can still be improved by the addition of your personal faves that didn’t make the fairly obvious selection. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out or Atlantic City, anyone?

With compilations, homemade has always been the way to go, since the days of the C90, and while hand-compiled tapes and CDs still make great gifts, it’s a whole lot easier to email over a Spotify playlist.

It would seem natural to end this with some links to Spotify compilations I’ve compiled. But they’ve got my favourite songs on. Go and compile your own.

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