Comment by staticassertion

9 days ago

I listen to a lot of old music - 1950s, 1960s. I don't really have peers who listen to it so discoverability is a real issue. Pandora was amazing for me ~20 years ago, it introduced me to songs I never would have heard. Especially in the 50s you had a lot of "one hit wonders" so just listening to a band wasn't a great way to find other songs that I would like.

I don't really use Spotify so I can't compare but Pandora was awesome. I've found Youtube playlists to be the best replacement so far.

The old stuff is the good stuff alright,

(1930s) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHLbaOLWjpc

(1950s) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6isIPytpk40

(1960s) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qssa6ec7faQ

> I don't really use Spotify so I can't compare but Pandora was awesome. I've found Youtube playlists to be the best replacement so far.

You do realize Pandora is still there, right?

  • For me, it's been 'gone' since 2017, when they shut down in Australia. They used to be available everywhere, but locked off international audiences when laws became inconvenient.

    (Obviously you could VPN in, but it's a meaningful hassle.)

    • > They used to be available everywhere, but locked off international audiences when laws became inconvenient.

      The coverage I could find suggested that they were available in three total countries: the USA, Australia, and New Zealand.

      So there was no point at which they locked out "international audiences". They had a branch in Australia, and they closed it.

      1 reply →

  • Not really. I stopped using it at some point a very, very long time ago, and I don't recall why. I've moved to Youtube so it hasn't occurred to me to revisit.