http://musicovery.com/
Hello my brothers and sisters.
Musicovery is an amazing website which enables you to pick the music genre, the year-range and the ability to pick which mood you want the music to sound like. For instance, if you are feeling sad you can pick the DARK genre, If calm you can pick calm, if you are both you can select the median.
http://musicovery.com/
Check it out, this would indeed be a interesting app. Comparable to pandora,
There is a mobile version out only for symbian. Maybe someone or the lot of you can make this happen.
Cheers
Try and find the Last.FM app for WM6. Last.FM is pretty much the same thing except it's not as 'visual' and you type in tags to find music of various genres
I really don't listen to music on my phone very much. I have a desk job and keep Pandora streaming while at work. On my ~hour commute to and from work, I listen to audio books (it's the only time I get to "read"). But, I do enjoy music and have over 200GB of MP3s. Occasionally, I do want to listen to some of my music using my phone, such as when doing yard work or between audio books. Service around here is spotty, so streaming is typically out of the question.
I use Ubuntu on my PC. My phone is a Captivate. (As soon as I can cut off from AT&T, I'm upgrading!) It's been running SlimICS for a while, but I'm getting ready to upgrade to SlimBean.
I've tried a lot of different programs on the PC, and a lot of different apps and haven't found anything that fits my use. This is what I want:
What I want from the Android App:
- Designate a particular folder as the source for music. This is the big one for me. I don't want it catching my audio books (I have a dedicated audio book player that I love, but it's not suited for music), audio recordings, and other sound files. All but two apps I've tried didn't have that capability and one of those didn't seem to really work right. Why is that so rare of a feature?
- Use ID3 tags, including album art. But that's fairly common.
- Easy navigation. By artist, album, song titles, etc. Don't rely on "playlists." I don't build them. Just show me all my music and let me easily chose if I want to play a particular album, everything by a particular artist, a particular genre, everything all mixed up together, etc.
- Lock screen controls.
My favorite music app so far is 3 (Cubed). But, specifying a music directory doesn't work. It has a menu option to only look in a folder your specify, and I've enabled that, but it's still seeing my audio books and other sound files. It has lock screen controls but I don't like the way it changes the lock screen. And it has a beautiful interface interrupted by these ugly "pop up" boxes. I love using parts of it, but find other parts hard to use.
What I want from a Ubuntu program:
I'm currently using RhythmBox, and it's OK. It serves most of my needs except the big one. How it syncs to my phone. I have a LOT of music and I hate building playlists. I also hate trying to manually go through the thousands and thousands of songs trying to pick out which ones I want to copy to the phone. I just don't have that kind of time. What I want it to do is just randomly pick songs until a threshold that I set has been met. For instance, copy 5 GB of random songs from my entire collection to my phone. Or, copy 3 hours of random songs from the Metal genre. Or perhaps I'm in a Dylan kind of mood so I want it to copy 3 hours of random Bob Dylan songs. And if there's something specific I want to put on the phone, I can do that manually.
So, am I overlooking something that will give me these options? Is there something out there for me?
ubuntu: moc
android: poweramp
I am pleased with both.
Sent from my SGH-I777 using xda premium
I haven't looked at PowerAmp because, well... it's not free. Free isn't a requirement, but I just don't feel like I listen to music on my phone enough to justify paying for an app like that.
Now, about moc... I had not heard of that before. I googled it and read about it, but I don't see any way to do what I'm wanting to do.
yeah, its different than what you want. The complete opposite, actually. But I still recommend it -- it grows on you. Worth an apt-get.
Sent from my SGH-I777 using xda premium
I haven't tried it yet, but this program looks promising: http://mr-random.sourceforge.net/docs.html#Doc/
Give PowerAmp a try, they have the trial version. Once you've tried it, it's hard to use any other.
Music
HeathicusF said:
I really don't listen to music on my phone very much. I have a desk job and keep Pandora streaming while at work. On my ~hour commute to and from work, I listen to audio books (it's the only time I get to "read"). But, I do enjoy music and have over 200GB of MP3s. Occasionally, I do want to listen to some of my music using my phone, such as when doing yard work or between audio books. Service around here is spotty, so streaming is typically out of the question.
I use Ubuntu on my PC. My phone is a Captivate. (As soon as I can cut off from AT&T, I'm upgrading!) It's been running SlimICS for a while, but I'm getting ready to upgrade to SlimBean.
I've tried a lot of different programs on the PC, and a lot of different apps and haven't found anything that fits my use. This is what I want:
What I want from the Android App:
- Designate a particular folder as the source for music. This is the big one for me. I don't want it catching my audio books (I have a dedicated audio book player that I love, but it's not suited for music), audio recordings, and other sound files. All but two apps I've tried didn't have that capability and one of those didn't seem to really work right. Why is that so rare of a feature?
- Use ID3 tags, including album art. But that's fairly common.
- Easy navigation. By artist, album, song titles, etc. Don't rely on "playlists." I don't build them. Just show me all my music and let me easily chose if I want to play a particular album, everything by a particular artist, a particular genre, everything all mixed up together, etc.
- Lock screen controls.
My favorite music app so far is 3 (Cubed). But, specifying a music directory doesn't work. It has a menu option to only look in a folder your specify, and I've enabled that, but it's still seeing my audio books and other sound files. It has lock screen controls but I don't like the way it changes the lock screen. And it has a beautiful interface interrupted by these ugly "pop up" boxes. I love using parts of it, but find other parts hard to use.
What I want from a Ubuntu program:
I'm currently using RhythmBox, and it's OK. It serves most of my needs except the big one. How it syncs to my phone. I have a LOT of music and I hate building playlists. I also hate trying to manually go through the thousands and thousands of songs trying to pick out which ones I want to copy to the phone. I just don't have that kind of time. What I want it to do is just randomly pick songs until a threshold that I set has been met. For instance, copy 5 GB of random songs from my entire collection to my phone. Or, copy 3 hours of random songs from the Metal genre. Or perhaps I'm in a Dylan kind of mood so I want it to copy 3 hours of random Bob Dylan songs. And if there's something specific I want to put on the phone, I can do that manually.
So, am I overlooking something that will give me these options? Is there something out there for me?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The best suggestion I can give you is not a PC application, but is rather a piece of hardware. I would recommend getting a Pogoplug and an external HDD. Connect the Pogoplug to the HDD and then connect the Pogoplug to the internet via cat5/6, then create an account and download the app on your phone.. in this scenario, the only limit to what you want to store and how much space you have is the capacity of your external HDD; This device can support multiple HDD's, so its pretty much limitless.
^^1(2050]=7 1337 said:
The best suggestion I can give you is not a PC application, but is rather a piece of hardware. I would recommend getting a Pogoplug and an external HDD. Connect the Pogoplug to the HDD and then connect the Pogoplug to the internet via cat5/6, then create an account and download the app on your phone.. in this scenario, the only limit to what you want to store and how much space you have is the capacity of your external HDD; This device can support multiple HDD's, so its pretty much limitless.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I appreciate the suggestion, and it looks like a nice product, but I fail to see how that accomplishes my goal.
if you always wanted to know what your favourite music sounds like in reverse or if you wanted to discover messages that can only be heard if you listen to music in reverse, you can now do it
BackMusic is a music quiz in which you can guess your own music in reverse. It can be really challenging sometimes. It currently supports two different game modes. One where you have to guess your music in reverse while some answer possibilities are presented to you and one in which you don't get answer possibilities.
It would be nice if you would try it and rate it
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=de.nilswieber.backmusic&referrer=utm_source%3Dxdadevelopers%26utm_medium%3Dforum
And please tell me what you think is good and what's not ... Since it's my first app
While I enjoy working out, I will admit that going without my favorite music makes it much more difficult — especially with cardio. For me, good music equals gains. Equally important, though, is keeping track of progress, but that can often require switching between two or three apps. That is, unless you go old-school and carry a notebook.
Starting today, users of Runtastic will be able to access curated playlists from Play Music directly within the fitness app. These span a wide variety of genres and styles for any mood or physical activity. Control of the music is integrated directly into the Runtastic app, in the obvious "Music" section.
Finally, Google is offering all users of Runtastic, on iOS and Android, free trials of Play Music for custom playlist creation and ad-free streaming. There is not any mention in the announcement of how long the trial is.
This sounds great for all of you who use both of these apps for your workouts. It's even tempting enough for me to re-download Runtastic (it's been a few years) to give this a go when I hit the gym today.
Hello! Thank you for your interest in the program coolRecorder!
First of all, let me note that I am not only a programmer, but also a musician and the main reason for creating this application is the desire to quickly and more or less accurately record the rehearsals of my rock band. Well, you know: musicians often invent new songs during long jams and it's hard to keep everything in my head. I searched for a long time, but I did not find a beautiful and convenient solution to this problem for myself, so I decided to create it myself.
What could be easier - I just press one button on my Wear OS watch to start recording! My smartphone can be located anywhere in the room and I do not need direct access to it. At the same time, I can pause and continue recording at any moment all the same right from my watch.
Record voice, music - anything with this fast, beautiful and convenient application. Share your records on social networks and messengers.
Ready-made presets will allow you to record voice, live music, or just your surroundings with the highest quality. For devices with Android 7.x and higher, a raw recording preset is available.
No advertisement, no donation, no internet connection required. This app simply does it's job - records sound.
I find this application really useful and I hope you will find it useful too. I also tried to make the application beautiful and simple enough so that you wouldn’t need instructions and tips to start using it.
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