Sup Forums's favourite music streaming service?

Sup Forums's favourite music streaming service?

pulseaudio

I use Soundcloud. It has a shitty bitrate (128 kbps), but it does the work, and I use it to discover music I like and nor very comercial/famous.
I donwload the music so I can listen it with a decent quality.

>Streaming music

I KNOW RIGHT
JUST BUY AN IPOD WITH A 500GB SD CARD


t.fedora lord

>having to download all songs before knowing if you like them or not

> living in the third world
> giving a fuck about bandwidth

>IPOD

>500GB
That's over 100,000 5 minute songs, properly encoded.
Do you really need 100,000 songs on your portable device?

utorrent

Groove music pass.

>music streaming service
Get out

>having to find a working link to download the song
>having to delete it if you don't like it or keep it somewhere else if you like it

Also, streaming would mean using more bandwidth because you load the song every time. And, stream usually stands for discover music, didn't you listen the radio back in time? That was a good way to discover new music, thought too much comercial.
Just stream for the first time and download for the rest of time you will listen the song.

iTunes Radio is honestly pretty awesome, but I don't have any Apple devices at the moment, so right now it's a mix of Pandora and Spotify.

Pandora (or iTunes Radio) for when you're just trying to work and need a constant stream of hits in the background, Spotify for my own playlists and discovery.

I also have a pretty extensive local music library as well as physical media, so I just listen to full albums in my local media player a lot, I'd say about as much as I use the two streaming services combined.

>get a private tracker or rutracker, slsk
> listen to it on youtube first and if you like it, download it

Last fm and spotify, I only use them to find good music though.

Spotify > *

Netease

dumb animeposter

None of 'em to be honest. I have 18,000 songs sitting on my Google Play Music account as a backup but I have about 1/4 of that on my smartphone for local playback and I tend to use that exclusively for most every instance of me listening to my own music. Haven't bought a CD in a decade, new music sucks ass, and on those incredibly rare occasions where something new comes along that I find interesting well, fuck it, I acquire it through other methods.

Can stream the stuff from Google without dinging my data plan thanks to T-Mobile so that's not an issue, I just don't give a fuck about streaming the tunes I already have locally stored.

I user a very obscure service. You've probably never heard of it.

>Go to Youtube
>Search for random artist I want to listen to.
>Let autoplay mix decide what to play.

Soundcloud
>It's free

Spotify

>2016
>still torrenting and hoarding music

...

I use Youtube to find new music (the new recommendation thing is pretty nifty), and if I like something, I download it from my favourite private tracker.

On mobile, Google Play, but just for my own stuff that I upload myself.

At home I use local.

I tried them all (since you get 1 to 3 free trial months with them).

From the important ones I'd rate them like this:
Spotify > Deezer > Apple > Google

Spotify only won because they had more times what I was looking for, while Deezer was missing a lot of stuff from old times (2000-2010).

Apple's UI is unusable in comparison no browser streaming. And google was the shittiest experience.

Soundcloud is not comparable because it has a different artistbase.

>downloading songs you've never heard before

So do you only download songs you've heard prior offline or something

What.cd

I use Apple Music for mainstream stuff, and SoundCloud for everything else. I also put most of my music onto an SD Card in my phone but that's only stuff I think is worth torrenting.

That's exactly what I was implying you master cock.

Spotify's discover weekly playlist is quality

Spotify is the best for UI and discovery.

I still pay for apple music instead though, because it works with "Hey Siri, play _____". May sound like a gimmick but incredibly convenient in practice.

Spotify but I wish the Linux client wasn't garbage

Deezer

>login to account
>get recommendations based on another hundred thousand similar users

Spotify

Then I download them and play through ncmpcpp

They actually make 128GB microSD cards; for the storage they're not even that expensive

Stay mad.

>not being worried about your access and freedoms
>not worried about TPP
>any year

I use Spotify and Soundcloud
Best combo for all music

Do most music streaming services offer 320 kbps MP3s?

>Netease
My Chinese roommate showed me this. Never looked back.

ONLY IF USE PLEB MP3

BUT ALL MY ANIME OSTS ARE ON FLAC

vk.com

kek
this

>Deprecated bloated mp3 320
>for streaming
Nigger what

None

>implying there's anything wrong with using the best PMP

And what he said can also actually be done

Google Play Music with my entire library uploaded to it and Spotify.

Serves my needs pretty well. Thinking about getting Apple music too to cover the gaps.

Groove Music is broken on Android.

Third world European country. Music streaming services like Spotify aren't even a thing here. So, most of them offer FLAC right?

Nope. iirc Spotify is Opus, with higher bitrate for premium users. Others I'm not sure of, but I'm almost positive none stream FLAC

I mean that mp3 is bloated dogshit that should die already, Opus 96-128kbps vbr is what you want for streaming.

I stream music through Windows Media Player. I download stations via Shoutcast.

Spotify. My parents love their music so I pay for the family plan.

>music streaming
I threw up.
>>>/facebook/

Youtube.com (^;

Sirius

>I'm almost positive none stream FLAC
I guess you've never heard of Tidal then ?

Just because I've heard of something doesn't mean I know everything about it, dumbass.

Literally the entire point and appeal of Tidal is that it streams lossless music. That's its whole reason for existing.
If you're heard of it, you should know this, dumbass.

I use Spotify and Apple Music. If one is missing something the other probably has it.

I hate how heavy the desktop clients for both are. iTunes has always been a bloatbeast and Spotify is a chromium-wrapped abomination that has no qualms with sucking up 350MB+ RAM doing nothing but presenting lists and streaming 320k vorbis.

The Spotify plugin for Clementine works and is lighter than the official client but the plugin's UI kinda sucks. I wish more people would try building alternative Spotify clients.

I don't keep up with streaming services as I don't care for their existence. The only thing I've ever heard about Tidal was that it exists, dumbass. It's not like people constantly shill it and why it should be used, you fucking mong.

Google Play Music
>pretty much fucking everything if it isn't Tibetan throat singing released on vinyl in 1986
>if you can't find something, torrent it and upload it
>pretty good custom radio
>pretty good playlists
>podcast manager

>inb4 personal freedoms
You're just listening to fucking music. Make a throwaway account or something if you're that paranoid.

Now that we are on topic of audio streams, I'm not sure if this has been asked before, but what's a good free software/app that would allow me to stream directly from my media library at home to my mobile devices? Preferablly something that handles transcoding for maximum data optimization in order to avoid using too much of my mobile data plan without compromising too much of the quality.

That graphic needs an update.

iTunes Radio has been integrated into Apple Music; Tidal is absent, Rdio has been acquired by Pandora and is now defunct; Google Play Music has a new icon; Rhapsody, iHeartRadio and Slacker Radio are now minimal players in the music streaming scene.

I have an iPod mini for listening to Love Live music.

Did you upgrade it to solid state yet?

amazon prime.

i already pay for it, so might as well use it