Call it nostalgia, call it wistfulness, call it what you will: sometimes we just need to find a new banger or two. We tend to create our musical identity very early on, and tend not to grow much musically beyond adolescence and early adulthood. In fact, one of our favorite streaming services Deezer was able to perform a study of 5, participants to determine the average point where people tend to stop expanding their music horizons. Unfortunately, that age hovered around 27 years and 11 months. The truth of the matter is that music composition, construction, and instrumentation has never been more diverse, technically complex, or better recorded than at any point in history. So what does this have to do with finding new music? In a similar vein, you probably hate a lot of the music your exes liked if you had a bad breakup—or love a song that you absolutely nailed at karaoke. If you want to chase a feeling, you need to be able to have that feeling in the first place. This is probably why your workout mix is so different than the rest of your music library. How you respond to music has more to do with your emotional state than it does how kickin' that beat is.

Old music wasn’t better, you were just younger
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Google's latest endeavor into streaming music services has a slight learning curve, only because it takes some inspiration from YouTube in how it handles your music. When you first start service, you're asked to pick some artists you like. Those selections are important because they direct listening suggestions made by YouTube Music. When you subscribe to an artist, you can find him or her in the Artists section of your library. After your initial selection of artists you like, you can continue to fine tune the app's suggestions with a thumbs up or down on an album or song. Open the app, view the currently playing song, and you'll find a thumbs down and a thumbs up on either side of the playback controls. Selecting a thumbs down will skip to the next song. So far, one of my favorite aspects of YouTube Music is the Offline Mixtape it creates and maintains on your behalf. Once you set it up, that is.
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Vinyl Digging
The world of music is ever-changing. We may reminisce about the days of walking around with our over-the-ear headphones, Walkman, CD player, or MP3 player. There are at least 1, songs uploaded to Spotify, Apple Music, Google Music, and more every hour of the day, according to Hypebot. How does one navigate such a wasteland — and wonderland — of audio? Some of the methods are better and more efficient than others. We just want to share accessible ways for you to find a new muse.
Google might not have as many YouTube Music subscribers as Spotify, but it has way more software engineers. It's now applying some of those smarts to better compete against its rival with a new automated playlist called "Discover Mix," spotted by 9 to 5 Google and some Reddit users. It's very similar in concept to Spotify's "Discover Weekly," in that it helps you find new songs and artists in line with your taste and listening history. I didn't get a chance to test it much myself and I'm not a YouTube Music user , so the selections it presented me were pretty random. However, one Reddit user said that "of the tracks from artists I have listened to before, almost all of them are songs I haven't heard before. Out of the 49 tracks in the playlist, I ended up "liking " and adding 32 of them to my library.