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So much for counting on technology as a safety net. Iâll have to keeping doing the dirty work.
The Manic Street Preachers released a new album, Resistance is Futile, on Friday. I didnât find out about it until yesterday (Monday). To be truthful, I probably knew the street date at one point in time. No doubt I got some sort of message about itâââI track the band as best possible. There were surely emails leading up to its release. I might have run across an article. But last week the album was far from being on my mind.
Anonymity is a problem. Iâm one of the few thousand people in the U.S.âââexcluding expats and Europeans on vacationâââwho like the band. OK, maybe thatâs an overstatement, but the Manics are one of those bands whose homeland popularity hasnât migrated to the States (see James, Girls Aloud, Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine, The Libertines et al). As a result, the bandâs albums fly way under the radar here.
Technology is supposed to help solve the anonymity problem. Algorithms predict what new music will interest me based on my listening history. A music service Iâve used for seven (Spotify) and ten or 12 (Pandora) years should know my favorite bands by now. They have received thousands of signals on which to base their calculations.
Subscription services talk up their music discovery prowess. Spotifyâs roughly 1,000-page form F-1 filed with the Securities Exchange Commission uses the word discovery 35 times. âWe are in the discovery business,â it says [page 97]. The serviceâs âpowerful music search and discovery engines,â combined with âa large and growingâ user base, enables Spotify to âcontinuously learn about [usersâ] listening behaviorsâ in order âto create a more personalized and engaging experienceâ each time a person visits [ibid].
But algorithms failed me this time. Curation failed me, too. And this was a textbook case the potential and promise of the algorithm-curation combination.
Spotify didnât let me know Resistance is Futile came out. Thereâs nothing in my New Release Radar, the algorithm-created playlist that provides a decent overview of new and recently released tracks. New Release Radar is a goodâand popularâdiscovery tool that introduces me to unknown artists and new tracks by familiar and beloved artists. But not this week.
I canât find the Manics if I browse through Spotifyâs New Music Friday playlist, a curated group of songs from the more prominent new releases. Digging around a bit, however, I see a new Manics song on the New Music Friday UK playlist. This was easy to miss. As a U.S. subscriber my default new music playlist is the U.S. version, New Music Friday (minus the UK). The solution is obvious: follow the UK playlist and sift through the two new playlists each week instead of one.
Pandora didnât let me know the album came out, either. I donât see Resistance is Futile on either the personalized new releases section or the general list of new releases of the Pandora Premium app. A new song might be programmed into a station but which one? Iâd guess New Rock but I get Godsmack, Greta Van Fleet, and the like. I just donât listen to New Rock too oftenâŠbut Pandora knows that.
Finding out about new releases requires some legwork. I have something of a system. Itâs far from perfect.
Each Friday I look at the previous nightâs email from Grimeyâs Used and Pre-loved Music, a great Nashville record store, to see what new albums the store highlights. Grimeyâs always alerts customers about good albums. I didnât read the email Friday, but the Manics album wasnât mentioned.
I try to remember to look at MusicREDEFâs Friday emails to see what new releases get a mention. The Manicsâ album made the list but I didnât read Fridayâs email. So, user error in that case.
I follow the Manics on Twitter. The problem is I probably miss 95 percent of things on Twitter because I donât spend much time there. Using Twitter to learn about new music is like scanning movie credits moving at 100x speedâ if youâre actually looking at the movie credits to begin with. Side note: Twitter did alert me about the album but it was a MusicWeek tweet. I have a list of music industry trade pubs/blogs so I donât have to sift through hundreds of Tweets to run across a single Billboard article of interest. Maybe Iâll have to put together a Twitter list of my favorite bands.
I rarely look at Facebook, so no chance of learning about an albumâs street date there. Perhaps Iâm guilty of laziness in this case, but Iâll choose ignorance over frequent Facebook use.
I subscribe to the Manicâs email list. The email about the albumâs release arrived Friday, but I missed it. With the high number of emails I get, I often miss stuff in my Gmail âUpdatesâ folder. If the email came to my primary folder (Iâll fix that) I might have seen it. Again, user error.
You can forgive me for not opening the Manicsâ last email, though. Hereâs a typical Manics email loosely translated into American English (with a Southern dialect since I live in Nashville):
âThanks for being a fan way over there. We know you enjoy email updates about new concert dates about 10,000 miles from your home. On those rare occasions we announce a U.S. tour, itâs unfortunately one of those eight-city jaunts that skips your market and effectively says, âWell, we gave it a try but the U.S. is a hard nut to crack!â And while we have your attention, weâre going to debut a new video on the bandâs official Vevo channel that youâre not allowed to view for licensing reasons.â
To be fair, Spotify and Pandora have introduced me to great music I wouldnât have otherwise found. On a regular basis. But services frequently seem to be more interested in new recordings by new artists than new recordings by familiar bands. Thereâs ample evidence for this. All streaming services (as far as Iâm aware) try to enhance their brand by associating themselves with next big things and up and comers.
But I need streaming services to do heavy lifting. Theyâre built to lead listeners to music theyâll love. Left to my own devices, Iâll get crushed under an avalanche of social media posts, emails, and magazine articles. Nobody who works full time and has a family is going have the spare time to outrun the debris.
Data is the solution. I wonât count on human programming. Curators canât be expected to perfectly understand my likes and dislikes; I canât be expected to have similar tastes as curators.
Help me, algorithms. Youâre my only hope.
The day music discovery failed me was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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