Love Your Music

Best Comment Contest

How would you like to win a free copy of the Love Your Music eBook, a Spotify invite or $10 in credit on Amazon MP3?

The winner of my Best Comment contest will have their choice of one of those prizes. The way it works is simple. Just post a comment on this blog, the Love Your Music Facebook page, Tweet at Love Your Music, or otherwise comment on something I post or send me somthing interesting. I will collect the best comments over the next two weeks, post them on this blog and then pick the winning Best Comment in two weeks on Tuesday, September 13.

So, what kind of comments am I looking for?

  • Interesting comments about a blog post or link I share.
  • Tell me something I don't know. Share a new website or music app.
  • An interesting question.

A great place to start adding comments is my blog from yesterday, Spotify: Free + Social = Game Changer.

Good luck and thanks for your comments!

Three More Spotify Invite Winners

The three winners of this week's Spotify invites are Lori Mann, TJ Winter and John Wilson. Thanks for liking Love Your Music on Facebook!

For those of you who have been following Love Your Music for a while, your chance to get a Spotify invite is coming. I will share more details this week.

 

Spotify Invite Winners

Thanks to those of you who liked Love Your Music on Facebook this week!

As promised, I gave three invites to Spotify to those who did the liking. The three winners of the Spotify invites are James Tingey, Mary Millner and Christina Brown.

Winners: I've already sent the invites. You should get them right away. Please let me know if there are any problems. I hope you enjoy Spotify. I would love to know what you think. Please message me after you've played with it for a while.

I will be giving away three more invites to Spotify this week. It will work the same as last week. Just like Love Your Music on Facebook for a chance to win.

 

"Like" Love Your Music on Facebook to be entered to win a free Spotify invite

Do you want to try Spotify?

For the next two weeks I will be giving away Spotify invites (see my Spotify roundup).

There are two ways that you can use Spotify yourself:

  1. Pay to use the premium version.
  2. Get an invite to use the free version.

You can request an invite on Spotify.com and wait a few weeks for your request to go through, or you can "like" Love Your Music on Facebook and be entered to win a spotify invite in just a few days.

I will be giving away three Spotify invites this week and three more next week. Everyone who likes Love Your Music on Facebook between now and August 29 will be automatically entered to win the invite. I will contact the first batch of winners next Tuesday, August 23 and the second batch of winners on Tuesday, August 30.

Good luck!

Link: Love Your Music on Facebook.

 

Love Your Music eBook -- Now on Barnes & Noble's BN.com

I'm pleased to announce that Love Your Music - how to always listen to music you love by harnessing today's music technology is now available on Barnes & Nobles's BN.com.

Love Your Music eBook

In addition to the new Kindle version of the Love Your Music eBook I announced last week, there is also a new ePub-format version that is custom-formatted and laid out specifically for devices like Barnes & Noble's Nook eReader, Google Android devices and Apple iOS devices like the iPhone and iPad (see a complete list of ePub devices). If you don't have a Nook or other eReader, you can still buy it from BN.com and read it on your computer using ePub software software like Calibre.

One of the reviews on BN.com:

I acquired most of my music in the 90s, back when people first started using digital music. I had music in lots of different file formats and a lot of files with incomplete information (like missing artist name, genre, etc). As a result, it was hard to find the music I wanted to listen to. Love Your Music showed me how to clean up my music collection. Now I listen to what I want quickly and easily.

 

Check it out:

Love Your Music (ePub version) on BN.com

Love Your Music (Adobe Acrobat PDF version)

 

 

Playlists: the key to getting the most from your music collection

Thinking of playing music at your next party? How about making a mix for the gym? Tired of searching through your entire music library for your favorite songs? Most digital media software such as iTunes, Media Monkey, Windows Media Player, and other 3rd party programs allow users to create playlists. Playlists are a collection of tracks that can be played in your media player or PMP that allow you to quickly and easily select the music you want to hear. Playlists are also a great way to gather and listen to music that suits a particular mood or occasion.  But before crafting your next 80s throwback mix, it's important to understand the two types of playlists: manual and auto.

Note: The following is an excerpt from The Love Your Music eBook -- guaranteed to contain “everything you ever wanted to know about digital music” or your money back.

Manual playlists can be created in your media player software by dragging and dropping your tracks from your library into a playlist. This works fine if you know exactly which tracks you want to listen to. Unfortunately, you have to tediously find each track among the thousands you may have in your library when you create a manual playlist.
 
Auto playlists remove the tedium of creating playlists by using metadata criteria to filter the tracks in your library.  As auto playlists, large playlists can be created in seconds rather than minutes or hours as manual playlists. However, auto playlists have flaws of their own. With auto playlists you sacrifice the minute control you have over the list of songs as compared to manual playlists. This can be rectified by spending time and effort to get good metadata onto your tracks.  Overtime this will increase an auto playlists’ ability to get the right music for the right situation.

 

Manual vs. auto playlists

Manual and auto playlists both have their uses and I regularly create both types of playlists.
Some media players only have "normal" or "manual" playlists. Others have "auto" or "smart" playlists.

So, what's the difference between manual playlists and auto playlists?

Manual playlists…

  • ...are an ordered list of tracks
  • ...have a set order (set by you), but you can randomize the order in which tracks are played.
  • ...can have any tracks from your collection.
  • ...offer the most ability to customize a playlist.
  • ...are not criteria driven and do not have tracks automatically added and removed from them based on criteria.
  • ...are created by gathering individual tracks and putting them into a list, typically by dragging and dropping them from the library onto a playlist.

Auto playlists…

  • ...are criteria-driven. The contents of an auto playlist are based on the metadata filters that you apply while creating the playlist. The only tracks that appear in the auto playlist meet all of the criteria that you provide. No exceptions.
  • ...are defined by their criteria. What you see on the screen when you look at an auto playlist are the results of filtering your collection by the auto playlist‘s criteria. The software only stores the criteria and generates the result when the auto playlist is viewed.
  • ...automatically update their contents when tracks' metadata change. For example, if you have a playlist that is all of your four-star-and-up tracks, this playlist will automatically add new tracks that are rated four stars and up when you add a new track or change an existing track‘s metadata.
  • ...cannot have arbitrary tracks removed from them. For example, if my auto playlist contains a song that I don‘t want, there is no way to just delete that song from this auto playlist like I can in a manual playlist. I would have to change the auto playlist‘s criteria to exclude the song instead.
  • ...have no set order and cannot be ordered as exactly as manual playlists.
  • ...are created by specifying the playlist‘s criteria to the media player and then having the media player show the results as a playlist.

 

How to use auto and manual playlists

I use auto playlists for certain categories of music that I expect to change and evolve. For example, I have playlists for:

  • Favorite rock
    • Genre = rock, rock & roll, etc
    • Rated four stars and up
  • Favorite indie and alternative
    • Genre = alternative, alternative rock, indie pop, indie rock, etc,
    • Rated four stars and up
  • Favorite new music
    • Acquired in last six months
    • Rated four stars and up
  • Favorite 80s
    • Release year = 1980 – 1989
    • Rated four stars and up
  • Favorite background
    • Occasion = background
    • Rated four stars and up
  • Need to rate
    • No rating

The "favorite rock" and "favorite indie and alternative" auto playlists will continue to change and evolve as I acquire more rock, indie and alternative music. The "favorite new music" will always contain my newest, highly-rated music, ensuring that I can always be able to listen to my favorite new music. The "need to rate" list will always show me the tracks that are unrated and, thus, need to be rated. If I had made manual playlists of these tracks, they would not change and evolve and would not be nearly as useful.

On the other hand, I mostly use manual playlists for one time events like birthdays, New Year's Eve parties and other special events. I often start with an auto playlist, copy its tracks to a new manual playlist and then edit that playlist. I work on the playlist's order. I add and remove tracks until I get it right. For example, I often start with my favorite dance playlist (occasion = dance, rated four stars and up) and then tweak it for the particular occasion. For family parties I'll have more music from the 50s, 60s and 70s so that all generations feel included. For parties with friends I'll throw in some of our groups' favorites. Then I save the playlist with a descriptive name like "New Year's Eve 2010."

In summary, manual playlists are best for situations where you want exact control over the content and order of a playlist and never want it to change. Auto playlists are best for situations where you want a playlist to grow and evolve over time and the order doesn't matter. Both have their own advantages and disadvantages and provide great ways for you to get the most from your music collection.

Love Your Music -- Now on Amazon.com

Love Your Music - how to always listen to music you love by harnessing today's music technology is now available on Amazon.com!

Love Your Music eBook

This new version is custom-formatted and laid out specifically for the Kindle. If you have a Kindle, this will look nice. If you don't have a Kindle, you can still buy it from Amazon and read it on your computer using Amazon's Kindle software.

One of the reviews on Amazon.com:

For listeners who are just getting into digital media and want a jump start, or those who are casually acquainted with digital music, this book offers insight on perhaps the most important desire listeners might have: getting the most out of their music!

 

Check it out:

Love Your Music (Kindle version) on Amazon.com

Love Your Music (Adobe Acrobat PDF version)

 

 

Love Your Music's new cover and a new, lower price

They say you shouldn't judge a book by its cover, but in this case, I hope you do. Thanks to a wonderful photo I found from an artist online and a little bit of design and layout work, the Love Your Music - how to always listen to music you love by harnessing today's music technology has a slick new cover. I think it really conveys the technology-meets-fun ideas I have tried to convey in print.

Love Your Music eBook

Along with the refreshed cover, comes a new, lower price. I want to price the book to move, so we've lowered the price from $19.95 to $9.99. There is no better time to get the book that one reviewer says

"...makes the daunting task of organizing digital music digestible to even the most non-computer-savvy of people. Love Your Music lays out how a wallflower can take control of their music and become a dance commander. Best of all, it's fun to read."

To find out more or buy a copy, check out the Love Your Music eBook website.

 

 

Why iTunes Sucks

Note: The following is an excerpt from my new book, The Love Your Music eBook -- guaranteed to contain “everything you ever wanted to know about digital music” or your money back.

Just because iTunes is the most popular media player and online music store on the market doesn’t mean it doesn’t suck. Now I don‘t really think iTunes totally sucks, but certain parts of it are really bad. There are several media players that I would use before iTunes. Read on for the top reasons why iTunes sucks and you should use a better media player and shop from better and less expensive music stores.

Here are the particularly bad parts of the iTunes media player:

  • It doesn‘t save the ratings you apply (1 to 5 stars) back to tracks (meaning the ratings are easily lost).
  • It can‘t play rented music, meaning you can’t play rented tracks from Rhapsody, Napster or Zune.
  • It can only sync with iPods, not other Portable Media Players (PMPs).
  • It takes a comparatively long time to start up and consumes a lot of system resources.

There are several media players that don’t suffer from these issues, including WinAmp, Windows Media Player, Song Bird, and, my favorite, MediaMonkey.

The table below compares different media player software (listed in the left-most column) across a variety of criteria (listed across the top). The check marks indicate the best media player in each category and red Xs indicate a media player that is poor in a particular category).

Media Player OS Cost Can play Can't play Works with these PMPs Doesn't work with these PMPs Auto playlists Metadata

iTunes

iTunes

Mac, Win

Winner

Free

MP3, AAC, M4A

loser

WMA, rented tracks iPod

PlaysForSure,
Zune

loser

Yes Pros: Has grouping field, which can be used as free-form tag field.

Cons: No mood, no occasion, some metadata not stored in track files.

Media Monkey

MediaMonkey

Winner

Win only Free*

MP3, AAC/M4A, OGG, WMA (including rented tracks), FLAC

Winner

N/A

Winner

iPod, Plays for Sure,
USB mass storage devices

Winner

Zune

Winner

Yes

Comprehensive

Winner

WinAmp

WinAmp

Win only Free*

MP3, AAC/M4A, OGG, WMA, FLAC

Winner

N/A

Winner

iPod, Plays for Sure Zune No No mood, no occasion, no grouping.

Windows Media Player

Windows Media Player

Win only Free

MP3, WMA (including rented tracks)

loser

AAC, M4A Plays for Sure

Zune, iPod

loser

Yes No occasion, grouping.

*Free version is missing some features that are available in the paid version
OS: Operating System
Mac: Macintosh OS
Win: Windows OS
WinnerBest in Category
loserWorst in Category

 

A point that I can‘t stress enough is to make sure you are saving your metadata changes back to your files, not just to your library. Use MediaMonkey or Windows Media Player; they will do this for you.

Unfortunately iTunes will keep your metadata in a special library file separate from your music files. That means even if you backup your music collection, if your computer‘s disk goes bad, or it is stolen, then you will lose all of the ratings you have applied to your tracks, unless you also backup the iTunes library file. If you choose to use iTunes, you will need to backup your iTunes library file separately from your music.

iTunes also has the most popular online music store. While I’m picking on iTunes media player, here are some things that are bad about its store (which you access via the iTunes media player software):

  • It‘s expensive. You can almost always find any song or album for less at a different store.
  • It doesn‘t sell MP3s. It only sells less-compatible M4A files.

You have to buy each and every track you want to listen to, because, unlike other stores:

  • It doesn‘t have any rental music.
  • It doesn‘t let you stream music.

There are many music stores out there that sell DRM-free MP3s and/or rented tracks including eMusic, Amazon MP3, Napster, Rhapsody and Zune. All of these stores are usually cheaper than the iTunes music store too!

So, as you can see, there is a lot not to like about iTunes. For a better media player, check out
MediaMonkey. For a better music store, try eMusic, Amazon MP3, Napster, Rhapsody or Zune.

For more info on how to get the most from your music, check out The Love Your Music eBook.

What's the difference between streaming and downloading music?

Note: The following is an excerpt from my new book, The Love Your Music eBook -- guaranteed to contain “everything you ever wanted to know about digital music” or your money back.

You have probably streamed and downloaded many different music tracks, but have you ever thought about the difference between streaming and downloading? Your music experience can be enhanced by understanding that streaming and downloading each work best in different situations.

When streaming music, the music is transferred to your computer and played immediately, without being stored permanently. Streaming requires an internet connection. When downloading music, the music is transferred to your computer and stored in a file on the computer‘s hard drive. Your computer can play the music file immediately or at some point in the future. Once music is downloaded it doesn‘t require an internet connection to be played.

In between purely streaming music and totally downloading music there are several shades of gray.

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