• tiredofsametab@kbin.run
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    1 month ago

    People have playlists and multiple ones at that 0.o What are the usecases of playlists? I guess maybe I could see working out, but wouldn’t the same songs in the same order over and over lose their punch?

    Edit: could you please explain instead of just downvoting? I’m genuinely unsure here.

    • IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Yes. Also, you can shuffle playlists. Anyway, I have about ~40 current playlists, not counting sub-sets, out of which I use 5-10 day-to-day. They’re basically genre/mood tags but I don’t want to clutter up my entire library with fake genres so playlists it is.

      I used to run a single playlist, essentially just my entire library, but the issue with that is I would be skipping songs constantly and it would jump from upbeat to sad to energetic to slow… it got old. Now, if I’m feeling in a rave mood I put on that playlist. Pop? Got it. Angry, sad, EDM, synthwave, swing, phonk, metal, hip-hop… the list goes on but I’ve got playlists for 'em and I don’t want to listen to each of them every day or at the same time. If I am feeling multiple I just queue up multiple on shuffle. It’s allowed me to be a lot more adventurous in my music taste by separating out the rare listens for only when I need them. Keeps me from getting bored of them.

    • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago
      1. You can randomize playlists play order

      2. Playlists are great for storing songs you found and you’ll never rememeber otherwise. For example, I have a playlist called “awesome obscure” where I put all songs from artists I generally don’t know. Say a friend sent a song, a song came on a spotify weekly list whatever. I also have a playlist called “nostalgia” where I store all my old time favorites. If I remember a song from the past, I put it there so I don’t have to think so hard if I want a hit of my personal nostalgia.

      3. Listening to (good) songs multiple times actually makes me appreciate songs more.

      4. Having the playlist not set to randomize can actually also be a great way to set expectations/an experience on what comes next. I’m a shuffle guy myself, but I could see handpicking moods to chain together. Say (for example) you start with some slow songs to wake up, but the playlist gradually increase in tempo and vibes to wake you up. It could be a routine thing.

      5. Playlists don’t have to be a few songs long, they can have hundreds, or thousands of songs. They don’t lose their punch if it takes 30 hours to get through them.

      So basically it’s a personalized list of songs YOU want to keep together for any meriad of reasons.

        • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          No problem!

          Some other usecases:

          1. My band has a shared playlist of all the song covers we play. That way we can acces the songs easily and listen to them to practice.

          2. A different band I’m in has an “inspiration” playlist where we put songs that inspire us in the genre we create music in. Anyone can add songs they have found in the wild.

          3. I’ve made “songs you might like” playlists for friends. A collection of songs that particular person might like.

          4. Genre/mood playlists. Yes, spotify/other services have this feature, but they will include many songs you might not know/like. If you want a rock playlist with only your own rock music, make the playlist yourself!

  • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    One of the songs that is used in many(not all) of my playlists is Mutemath - You Are Mine.

    The song has vibes, can be played as background noise, but also as a listening song. It is melancholic, but not so sad that it can’t be played on a sunny day(although it is more suited for rainy days and autumn weather for sure)

  • giriinthejungle@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I think it’s Lay it on me by Vance Joy. It has a part about him being sad, then there is love, and then an instrumental chorus to which I dance to (given a chance). I guess I find it pretty uplifting.

  • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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    1 month ago

    What happens when the heart just stops by the frames. Went through a breakup not too long ago, just feeling The vibes now.

  • somnuz@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    I never actually counted but thanks to your question I know now. Currently I am enjoying music on 45 playlists and there is zero songs overlapping, with a small exception of “temporary” playlist — where songs are awaiting being sorted and this one is generally a “beautiful mess”.

    There might be like 5 songs that occupy different playlists but they are in different versions, covers, unplugged/concert versions or redefining remixes.

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    “Around the World” by Daft Punk. The strangest thing is though, I don’t use traditional playlists, but layered random smart play lists. I generate a list of 300 songs, by combining my 2, 3, 4 and 5 star playlists to give me a random selection of songs, but with my preferred ratio of 2:3:4:5 star rated music.

    So the over representation of this song is just how statistics work and means nothing. If it wasn’t that song, it would be some other song that has been played more than the others.

  • Shurimal@kbin.social
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    1 month ago

    Since I mostly listen by dropping a whole genre into an ephemeral playlist, there is zero overlap. I rarely even hear a piece more than a few times a year, and sometimes the whole playlist takes more than a year to play from 0 to Z at an average of 1 hour play every day (eg I have pretty much the complete catalogue of Ektoplazm, including 575 goa trance and 377 downtempo albums).

    Even if I have a few static playlists of random pieces, they’re also thematic (eg a bluegrass playlist as background music for dogfighting) and with zero overlap between them.

    Come to think, of it, I only have two static, saved playlists—one for dogfighting and one with pieces that have subbass and ULF content down to and below 20 Hz. Playlists for me are wholly ephemeral, the default one that gets cleared and refilled as I go, acting more as a playback queue, and temporary ones that get deleted when I’m done with them.