I wish there was a good in between option. I despise the autogenerated playlists for all the reasons mentioned in the article, but I also enjoy the ease of not having to choose what to listen too.
Algorithmically generated playlists from my personal library with the occasional new song thrown in. Maybe, new songs introduced that my social circle is listening to.
That said, I'm recently back to listening to albums exclusively again, which mostly solves this for me. If a friend suggests a song or I hear something on the radio, I pickup the album and listen through. It's a great way to discover new stuff while avoiding the trash. My only real issue is that so many artists I enjoy are in the EP only stage of their career, so for those, custom playlists is the only way.
Most people probably don't know what a DJ really does, which is investigate, curate, and catalog a whole library of music and then tailor it to the mood of an event or crowd, moment by moment.
This is a feelings-based job that directly operates where feelings hit the body with the physics of sound and motion. Lacking either feelings or a body, there can't be an algo for a DJ.
The best thing about Sirius/XM is they pay human DJs to find and play music us mortals would never know about and to put it in contexts we'll enjoy.
I wish there was a good in between option. I despise the autogenerated playlists for all the reasons mentioned in the article, but I also enjoy the ease of not having to choose what to listen too.
Algorithmically generated playlists from my personal library with the occasional new song thrown in. Maybe, new songs introduced that my social circle is listening to.
That said, I'm recently back to listening to albums exclusively again, which mostly solves this for me. If a friend suggests a song or I hear something on the radio, I pickup the album and listen through. It's a great way to discover new stuff while avoiding the trash. My only real issue is that so many artists I enjoy are in the EP only stage of their career, so for those, custom playlists is the only way.
Most people probably don't know what a DJ really does, which is investigate, curate, and catalog a whole library of music and then tailor it to the mood of an event or crowd, moment by moment.
This is a feelings-based job that directly operates where feelings hit the body with the physics of sound and motion. Lacking either feelings or a body, there can't be an algo for a DJ.
The best thing about Sirius/XM is they pay human DJs to find and play music us mortals would never know about and to put it in contexts we'll enjoy.