golfbravobravo
Headphoneus Supremus
Here's a playlist I stumbled on a few years ago. The Spotify link only shows 100 songs but here's the complete list of 3500 songs is attached below.
Being greedy, I don't suppose anyone has an m3u?
Here's a playlist I stumbled on a few years ago. The Spotify link only shows 100 songs but here's the complete list of 3500 songs is attached below.
Sorry. Even if I did all of the URLs would point back to Spotify which isn't useful to you.Being greedy, I don't suppose anyone has an m3u?
My suggestion: Open a free Spotify trial account. Use one of the 3rd party transfer services (Soundiiz, MusConv, etc) to export from Spotify and import to Qobuz, Tidal, Apple, etc.Being greedy, I don't suppose anyone has an m3u?
Is anyone else scratching their head right now? The streaming services pay for the rights to stream music, I doubt if said services want unauthorized music to be added on or am I missing something here?My suggestion: Open a free Spotify trial account. Use one of the 3rd party transfer services (Soundiiz, MusConv, etc) to export from Spotify and import to Qobuz, Tidal, Apple, etc.
You're just exporting the metadata, artist and album name, song titles, etc.Is anyone else scratching their head right now? The streaming services pay for the rights to stream music, I doubt if said services want unauthorized music to be added on or am I missing something here?
I could see music being added to a music player such as Jriver etc.
Anyone remember Napster? It became a legal streaming service that charges for subscriptions.
Thanks for explaining. I run Tidal and it seems that info is there unless you are talking specifics like Music that appeared on the Bosch series which is where the conversation started.You're just exporting the metadata, artist and album name, song titles, etc.
The idea is to create playlists in other streaming services that contain the same tracks as in a given Spotify playlist. Or if you have a Spotify account and a Qobuz account, keep your playlists in sync if possible.Is anyone else scratching their head right now? The streaming services pay for the rights to stream music, I doubt if said services want unauthorized music to be added on or am I missing something here?
I could see music being added to a music player such as Jriver etc.
Anyone remember Napster? It became a legal streaming service that charges for subscriptions.
This is a good read How Music Got Free: A Story of Obsession and InventionIs anyone else scratching their head right now? The streaming services pay for the rights to stream music, I doubt if said services want unauthorized music to be added on or am I missing something here?
I could see music being added to a music player such as Jriver etc.
Anyone remember Napster? It became a legal streaming service that charges for subscriptions.
So has anyone done this? Can you make such an addition to Tidal? I just thought they would be more of a closed system but I studied engineering not computer science.The idea is to create playlists in other streaming services that contain the same tracks as in a given Spotify playlist. Or if you have a Spotify account and a Qobuz account, keep your playlists in sync if possible.
You could do all of that manually, it's just tedious.
Either way, you're limited to whichever songs are available on the respective streaming service.
Is anyone else scratching their head right now? The streaming services pay for the rights to stream music,
I doubt if said services want unauthorized music to be added on or am I missing something here?
Anyone remember Napster? It became a legal streaming service that charges for subscriptions.
I may check it out thanks. I can recall students getting busted for sharing music files over Napster. As I recall AC/DC was behind a lawsuit. I am not sure of the penalties that were actually charged but legally it was something like $1200 per song. There were some very worried students, faculty, staff as well as children of faculty around here. I am sure the laws have changed since then.This is a good read How Music Got Free: A Story of Obsession and Invention
All these streaming services have apps that run on your computer, tablet, or phone, and talk to some server(s) in the cloud. Essentially you sign in, which results in a unique, unguessable token, and you can use that token to tell the server what to do with your account (how you do all that is defined in an API - application programming interface).So has anyone done this? Can you make such an addition to Tidal? I just thought they would be more of a closed system but I studied engineering not computer science.
My bad, I misinterpreted what people were hoping for and now it makes more sense. Spotify showed music that was made for the Bosch series and it sure is not on Tidal that I can find.It’s a dark science, far more complicated than that. And then there’s the distributors in between, interfacing with the labels, which own the rights, and then the contracts with the…
Yeah I think you made a leap here. Nothing suggested here would add music to a service to stream to others. Exporting a list to another service is fine. If the list contents are not present in he other service, your importer will usually say so and that’s that.
Trying to forget those days. Brrr..
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I may check it out thanks. I can recall students getting busted for sharing music files over Napster. As I recall AC/DC was behind a lawsuit. I am not sure of the penalties that were actually charged but legally it was something like $1200 per song. There were some very worried students, faculty, staff as well as children of faculty around here. I am sure the laws have changed since then.