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Leave it to the RIAA to utterly screw up what likely could have been a good thing. No wonder barely anyone knows about it. Hell, I'm in the US and this is the first time I've ever heard of it :)
Leave it to the RIAA to utterly screw up what likely could have been a good thing.
Screw the RIAA and their bastard child SoundExchange.
Got a bill introduced in the House and Senate to roll back the internet royalty rates, and to allow the copyright owners the freedom to choose, but it died with last session and has not been reintroduced (that I know of).
As a musician I am appalled that SoundExchange is legally able to collect royalties on music I create without my permission or any contract, and then to give me only 40% of what they collect.
I'm not sure that this music genome thing has much value. As a test I typed in Alex Harvey, and it started playing crap by someone named Bob Mould. I expect many genomes might well defy classification. Of course it couldn't play this anyway due to license problems.
I typed in Three Days Grace and it started playing a bunch of songs by other artists I like, as well as some I'd never heard before but like now. I also use the Pandora app for my ipod touch. Definetly something I like and will keep using.
I'm not sure that this music genome thing has much value. As a test I typed in Alex Harvey, and it started playing crap by someone named Bob Mould. I expect many genomes might well defy classification. Of course it couldn't play this anyway due to license problems.
You can fine tune the algorithm by using the thumbs up and down option for individual songs, though I'm not sure how well this works in practice.
23 Apr, 2009, David Haley wrote in the 12th comment:
Votes: 0
It works kindasorta. Calling it a "genome" is really exaggerating a bit. It's more like some dude gave the song some attributes it has (like, "female vocalist") and then you get other songs with the same attribute (like, another song with "female vocalist"). A few other attributes help to make it a not completely wild match, but you occasionally get odd matches. Still, on the whole, it does an ok job of staying in a general genre.
Personally I have some five or six stations based on genre, and then use their quickmix feature to play them all randomly. It works fairly well, even though I get the impression that the same songs keep coming up, and only very rarely does something new (or rarely heard) come up. I wonder if it has to do with how many songs they have matching my criteria.
I'm not sure that this music genome thing has much value. As a test I typed in Alex Harvey, and it started playing crap by someone named Bob Mould. I expect many genomes might well defy classification. Of course it couldn't play this anyway due to license problems.
You can fine tune the algorithm by using the thumbs up and down option for individual songs, though I'm not sure how well this works in practice.
It works very well if you give it multiple seeds and have the patience to thumb up/down hundreds of songs. Over the years, I've built up several stations that consistently play nothing but songs I like, including numerous songs I'd never even heard of before. I think the last dozen or so CDs I actually bought were of bands I discovered from Pandora.
After using it for about 45 minutes, I found that I knew just about every song it was playing on the station I'd created, even if I didn't remember what it was called.
Pretty nifty little gadget. I'd say it's got potential.
Internet radio based on the Music Genome Project, it's pretty cool and I predict that it's the next big thing.