StumbleAudio: Find music you've never heard of but might like
There's no shortage of music recommendation engines. Whether you want to find music from artists that sound like Madonna or Meat Beat Manifesto, all you have to do is hit up Pandora, Last.fm, or a similar site and pop a name in the box. If the web site starts playing a song you like, you give it a thumbs up, while a thumbs down should help the software avoid playing music that makes you want to throw up in the future.
But one thing that Pandora and Last.fm have in common is that most of the music they play comes from major label artists. If you want to find music from independent artists, you might want to check out StumbleAudio. The web service uses a music recommendation image engine much like the other sites. But all of the artists are independent acts, which means they're either unsigned or signed to smaller labels.
If you find an artist you like, you can flip through the tracks on their album and listen to full length audio streams. Or you can click on the links on the side of the page to purchase digital downloads or physical CDs.
StumbleAudio currently features over 120,000 artists and 2 million songs. We found the recommendations were decent, but not exactly spot on. For example, the service claims it was able to find 388 artists that sound like the Allman Brothers. As far as we can tell, it actually found about 5 or 10 southern rock/blues bands, and a few hundred artists that sound nothing at all like the Allman Brothers.
[via TechCrunch]
But one thing that Pandora and Last.fm have in common is that most of the music they play comes from major label artists. If you want to find music from independent artists, you might want to check out StumbleAudio. The web service uses a music recommendation image engine much like the other sites. But all of the artists are independent acts, which means they're either unsigned or signed to smaller labels.
If you find an artist you like, you can flip through the tracks on their album and listen to full length audio streams. Or you can click on the links on the side of the page to purchase digital downloads or physical CDs.
StumbleAudio currently features over 120,000 artists and 2 million songs. We found the recommendations were decent, but not exactly spot on. For example, the service claims it was able to find 388 artists that sound like the Allman Brothers. As far as we can tell, it actually found about 5 or 10 southern rock/blues bands, and a few hundred artists that sound nothing at all like the Allman Brothers.
[via TechCrunch]













Comments
4
Subscribe to commentsTylerMJul 19th 2008 3:00PM
Last.fm is a thousand times better.
CellKillJul 20th 2008 4:22PM
I also like TheSixtyOne (www.thesixtyone.com). It's quite the same but adds a bit of a social aspect to it. Also the use of AJAX on the page is probably one of the best I've seen, very minimalist and functional.
CTWSep 1st 2008 9:39PM
You could try the Creative Commons netlabel scene, where you will find a mountain of (legally) free music. If you visit my amateurish blog, Catching The Waves, you'll find some album recommendations and links to music sites that are much better than mine. :-)
http://soundthefreetrumpet.typepad.com/
CTWSep 1st 2008 9:39PM
You could try the Creative Commons netlabel scene, where you will find a mountain of (legally) free music. If you visit my amateurish blog, Catching The Waves, you'll find some album recommendations and links to music sites that are much better than mine. :-)
http://soundthefreetrumpet.typepad.com/