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How do you discover new music in 2025?

Hey folks!

One of my life goals for 2025 was going back to single purpose devices and avoiding algorithm-based media consumption. No smartphones, no AIs, no Spotify.

I'm quite happy with my offline music library, even if it took a while to organize. I use MusicBee (it FINALLY runs perfectly via Wine, if you install some dependencies in your prefix) to listen, find artwork, find lyrics, create playlists and so on and I sync them to my Innioasis, a little iPod Classic clone that supports modern features like USB-C charging.

But here's the thing... how are people finding new music nowadays? I'd assume TikTok and automatic suggestions from your music streaming services, but are there alternatives?

TikTok would probably work for me if I didn't stop using social media, but I did. Apple Music's algorithm sucked tremendously when I used it in the past - it always recommended me Ed Sheeran, an artist I strongly dislike and not anywhere near adjacent to my taste in music (and tapping 'Not Interested' a million times never worked) and Spotify's worked well for a while, but then it started getting extremely repetitive and pushy, "Shuffle" became essentially "Your 10 most recently listened to songs, repeated often, and sometimes we sprinkle two suggestions you already didn't like but we think you should like actually"

49 comments
  • RateYourMusic, Gnoosic, and the old school way: on the radio. I have one curated music program that I listen to and discover new stuff.

    The YT algorithm also sometimes recommends good stuff that has few hundred views

  • Record labels... there are many but keeping up with a few that your favorite artists are already signed to is a great way to find similar music.

  • I switched to Tidal because of the issues you had. I've been loads happier with the artist radios, and their "New Arrivals" playlist tailors to listening habits really well. The daily mixes can be hit or miss with serving new stuff, but overall I've been happy with the results. On top of that their audio streaming quality is excellent, especially if you have good audio equipment or care about that sort of thing.

  • i mostly visit the RateYourMusic and AlbumOfTheYear charts and occasionally i'll check out the last.fm profiles of users i find interesting. basically, i treat music like a hobby but i do so because i desire that kind of connection. i love music so i devote a lot of time to it. i have pro accounts on all three places. luckily they are relatively affordable. i think last.fm is $3 a month lol. but yeah, i'd say if you are unfamiliar with RYM or AOTY then maybe check one out.

    edit: in case you're not familiar, all of those mentioned are music cataloging websites that you can create customized profiles on. last.fm will import your listening history and you can track your habits in real time. it's good for finding your stats.

  • New is probably different for me, only meaning new to my library, but usually radio.

    There is new music on radio, but I usually don't listen to those stations. But when I did, I got some recent music from there too. However for me where music peaks is the 80s and 90s.

    Other way is simply stuff I hear others listening to near me, and then Shazam it. Which is why for example Brooklyn by Glockenbach reminds me of very specific road section and SOR C 9.5 (bus).

  • This works of you are into electronic music. There's this app shotgun.live that manage and sell tickets to clubs and parties, mainly electronic, and when you check a party they link to the DJs soundcloud. So I go to the app, choose a city and see the parties that are being promoted and the DJs that are going to play and listen to their sets.

  • Radio Garden has thousands of radio stations in one app, from around the world. I've found a lot of great music that way.

  • I'm also out of mainstream media. So far I've got to music through YouTube, or should I say newpipe. I find channels that curate music I'm into, I see what they got, if something interests me then I'll make a dedicated search for the artist.

    I also straightforwardly asked a couple times here on Lemmy too, I was introduced to some really cool stuff I wouldn't have found otherwise.

    But I appreciate you posting this, some people are recommending new, non mainstream media ways of finding new music, that's good

  • Mostly just been going by what y'all post in the music communities like Eternal Playlist and Music. The last 30 or so favorited songs in my favorite list were directly from posts here on Lemmy.

    The other source is just using the song ID thing on my phone when I hear something I like while in a store or watching a video/TV show/movie.

    Originally, Spotify was really good at suggesting new stuff relevant to my tastes; but that ship sailed like 3 years ago.

  • I pick a genre I am feeling and go try different artists from that genre. I also get music recommendations from my friends like god intended

  • I've subbed Pitchfork's album reviews RSS. They tend to namedrop influences and contemporaries and that's what's keeping this 46 year old picking up 2025 albums (bit proud of the fact) :D

  • I subscribe to radio stations through my podcast app, Podcast Addict, though I expect others have the functionality too. An Indy Alt station out of New York, an EDM station out of Sydney, etc. new music curated by real, human DJs.

49 comments