Hi folks, first post. Just wanted to kick off a potential discussion, I don’t use streaming at all due to poor artist rates and the behaviour of certain CEO’s
At the moment, I’m at a sizeable vinyl collection around sixty and growing, mainly European Hard Rock/Metal, however I do have the odd HipHop type album too (Young Fathers)
I’m the type of guy who will buy an album based off the cover, which has introduced me to lots of cool stuff, but I was just wondering as I’m getting older, how are people finding new music in 2025?
Goes in my ears
Ive been using tidal for about a year and I love it. Better audio quality, better payment to the artists, family plan is the same price as shitify, but has 6 slots
I’m a metalhead. I have a pretty sizable CD collection so I really only take recommendations from metalheads that I know and trust and even then, I’ll usually check it out on youtube first to make sure it’s not a fluke decent song on an otherwise lousy disc (looks at Muse). Usually one of my friends will turn me onto something, float me a loaner. If so, I add it to the list of CD’s to pick up the next time I come up on loot.
Sometimes, when I’m hard up, I might go to Metal-Archives and just browse. Sometimes you get lucky. Years ago, I found that some specific labels seemed to sign a certain sound that I often liked. I’d often go to their site where they usually had audio clips to listen to. Most of them are gone now, but Century Media survived, and I still hit them up a lot. Again, needle in a haystack kind of thing but it’s so worth it when you find something better than great.
I buy the CD. I listen to it all the way through while reading the liner notes (if applicable nowadays) and take note of the track numbers I like. After, I burn those songs to MP3 and move them to my audio server. The CDs will go into one of a trio of shelves that hold my other discs and once there, may never see a laser again unless I loan it out or have need to play the disc in a player.
For the car, I use a Surfans F20. For the yard and woods and work, I add on a 80W portable speaker. At home, I usually play my burned mp3 files on a client computer thats tied into a stereo system and the network by using winamp (often with the enjoyable milkdrop plugin). It really whips the llamas ass.
Sometimes I use youtube for convenience but considering ads, auto-play and the algorithm, and now playlist swamping (for those who turn auto-play off), youtube is only good to listen to one song and then shut it off. The algorithm actively drives me away with it’s ineptitude. Not particularly relevant, but enough so that I thought I’d take a moment to shit on them for it.
Bought/2nd hand/rented CDs I rip as Flac to Jellyfin
Music files I rip as ogg from Spotify to Jellyfin.
Digital stuff I bought when CD wasnt worth it/not available.Good stuff, is Jellyfin similar to Plex?
yeah, it’s essentially open-source Plex
IMO? Better (and 100%free)
I’ve been on Tidal for a year or so now, as a slightly more ethical alternative to Spotify. I’ve been meaning to work on acquiring albums via Bandcamp or otherwise and storing them on my Jellyfin server - there’s some really good stuff that just isn’t on Tidal cause the artist isn’t big enough. But I really value having a music streaming service for discovery.
I’m a sell out that uses Spotify for modern and new music. I still have vinyls and a Garrand SL 95B for listening on. But I don’t buy many new vinyls lately, so it’s just the older music for that.
Finding? Mostly through shows watched, games played, recommendations from others, looking through bandcamp and listening to digital radio stations or looking up music we hear on youtube, owncast, peertube etc.
Buying? Mostly digital (DRM Free only, FLAC, manually transcoded to opus). We don’t currently really have a CD or Vinyl player and just use our devices to play music instead, sometimes over bluetooth.
Good shouts, I’ve never heard of Peertube or Owncast, looks like I’m doing some googling!
https://owncast.directory/ for current livestreams on owncast
I mostly buy music on iTunes, so I can export it to mp3 and have that available wherever (the mp3 conversion option is actually built-in).
iTunes is terrible for discovery though; it hides 90% of music on it unless you search for it explicitly, and only shows the most currently popular or new music. For discovery I don’t have one good approach I’ve found, I usually just do a web search like “artists similar to <band I’m currently listening to>” and see what comes up.








