Survey: How do you discover new music?
Survey: How do you discover new music? Posted on: 03.11.2013 by Shelia Tilson I'm curious to know how other people are finding new music. I set up a survey (didn't use the poll tool because it isn't precise enough) here:https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/DJ_Discovery_DJTT I'll post the results once enough people have responded. EDIT: The survey is only five questions so it's quick | |
Temple Cervelli 08.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JZed
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
Now I stand with my original statement, So fair enough you buy music, but your still illegally downloading others. Hard working DJ you might be, never questioned that. Downloading however much music from torrents, in my opinion is lazy, illegal and well, I just don't agree with it. Now on with how the thread, Digging through crates of vinyl, can't beat it, if its got a good cover give it a play, you may like it. |
Tera Baragan 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
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Gertrud Morsette 08.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JBang
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
I'm not saying that you don't pay for any music, I only quoted you on the part about the torrents. |
Jetta Drenzek 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by amadeus
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
I myself just dig through records online, Juno, Chemical, Redeye, Discogs Etc Best way of finiding new is checking out labels, who's releases on that label, who else they've released on, this leads to finding new artists, keep doing this and you'll find plenty. |
Tera Baragan 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JBang
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Ouida Ashe 10.11.2013 | I use beatport, VideoToolz2.0, dj city, and promo only |
Temple Cervelli 08.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JZed
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
Now I stand with my original statement, So fair enough you buy music, but your still illegally downloading others. Hard working DJ you might be, never questioned that. Downloading however much music from torrents, in my opinion is lazy, illegal and well, I just don't agree with it. Now on with how the thread, Digging through crates of vinyl, can't beat it, if its got a good cover give it a play, you may like it. |
Lakeesha Storman 07.11.2013 | You can usually find a lot of free, downloadable stuff on soundcloud for mashups, bootlegs, etc. At least I can. Just join some groups that specialize in music you would play and check out the postings there. |
Tera Baragan 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
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Jetta Drenzek 07.11.2013 | There usually is, but none that I've kept or already didn't have. For me it's the best way to find mashups and "DJ Tool" type tracks that you just aren't going to find anywhere else no matter how long you stumble around Beatport and Stompy. |
Gertrud Morsette 08.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JBang
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
I'm not saying that you don't pay for any music, I only quoted you on the part about the torrents. |
Jetta Drenzek 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by amadeus
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Lawana Mileto 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Sambo
I myself just dig through records online, Juno, Chemical, Redeye, Discogs Etc Best way of finiding new is checking out labels, who's releases on that label, who else they've released on, this leads to finding new artists, keep doing this and you'll find plenty. |
Jetta Drenzek 07.11.2013 | I use a few methods not mentioned here. A method I like to use is torrenting huge music packs that weigh in way over a gigabyte of random tracks, then dig through that. This is the best way to get rare bootlegs in 320 I find, after that huge download I usually end up with no more than ten new tracks tops, even when it contained over 500 songs. Another great method is using a Spotify app called Soundrop. This has rooms which have a theme and people (even yourself) can add a song to the playlist. To me this is the future of radio for a musician, when I don't have time to actively dig through music, I put this on in the background. Be warned though, you can end up listening to 5 hours of non deep house and only finding one decent track. |
Tera Baragan 07.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JBang
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Lakeesha Storman 06.11.2013 | discogs is my latest addiction. Holy hell I can get lost in there. |
Maryam Fevold 07.11.2013 | So everyone has mentioned the more straight-forward methods like virtual- and actual crate-digging. But there's the lifestyle shift you should make, too. ALWAYS be on alert for the music you hear going about your day. Hearing a song in a commercial. Going shopping and hearing a song on the store radio. Hearing a song in a movie or TV show. Use Shazam or Soundhound and record or make a note of what you're hearing. I've found a lot of good tracks that way. |
Ming Devis 06.11.2013 | Where's the record store/online option? |
Shelia Tilson 05.11.2013 | Hey guys, thanks for all the responses! This is what it came out to so far: http://imgur.com/lYdAhKf If we get significantly more I'll post the results as well. |
Rodolfo Oriol 05.11.2013 | I discover new music by mainly looking on soundcloud, facebook and alot of "crate digging" in beatport. Artists usually post their newest track on both soundcloud and facebook, which I usually look at 5-10 times a day. I also find alot of tracks on bandcamp, which wasn't mentioned in the pool. I usually download tracks from Beatport, Soundcloud and the Artists Official Page in facebook. Too bad spotify deleted their download option, they had REALLY awesome deals. |
Jolynn Schroyer 05.11.2013 | Soundcloud usually or google.com I just search for groups listen before I buy. |
Sherrell Dargenio 05.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by Superfreak
That's why I find it hilarious when I get an e-mail from Beatport, "Check out these massive unheard gems!" ... What, the same gems you just emailed to thousands of other people? |
Hank Guidas 05.11.2013 | Beatport top 100. |
Libbie Orion 04.11.2013 | i subscribe to label distributors. They send like 6 - 30 new tracks a week with label and contact info. |
Sonja Roybal 04.11.2013 | Mixes |
Will Spinello 04.11.2013 | Would have been good to have Boomkat and Bandcamp in there as options too. Maybe just me, but when I buy digital these days, I pretty much only buy from those two sites. I stuck them in under 'Other' so no damage done I guess. |
Will Spinello 04.11.2013 | Following charts will never replace a bit of digging and hardwork for finding real gems. By their very nature, charts can only tell you what everyone else already knows. |
Temple Cervelli 04.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by JZed
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Temple Cervelli 04.11.2013 | Done. I mainly use Beatport to find new music, if i like a track, i search through the record label that it was released on to find similar stuff, this always works for me, discovered some great labels this way, you gotta dig deep though, sometimes, get past all that commercial featured crap that site's promote and chuck in your face at first. Diggin' is the best way. Also, one of my most favorite ways is to watch DJ sets on YouTube, even videos recorded from a half decent camera for only 5mins, people ID tracks in the comments sections all the time on there and you can find some real good music that way, after finding the track from youtube, go and look deeper into the label it was released on, or the artist(s). I find this the best way, for me. |
Sherrell Dargenio 04.11.2013 | Done. I usually have some Mixcloud uploads playing in the background throughout the day so that's one place I hear new stuff, then I use Soundcloud and Beatport. I stick away from charts, finding stuff randomly are where the real gems are. |
Brunilda Kora 04.11.2013 | I only have ONE method for finding new music: EFFORT. (And, the harder I try, the more great music falls into my lap!) |
Palma Hanslip 04.11.2013 | Done. |
Shelia Tilson 03.11.2013 |
Originally Posted by ImNotDedYet
Thanks for taking it though guys! Hopefully in the next couple of days we'll have more respondents. |
Latoria Kavulich 03.11.2013 | Done mate. |
Lakeesha Storman 03.11.2013 | The wording of the last two questions sucked, but I believe the way you want it answered. The wording is, "how often do you use sites with charts to find/download music" when I believe what you meant to say was "how often do you use a site's charts to find/download music" At least, that's how I answered it. |
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