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Listening to ambient music with eMusic, iTunes, and an iPod

Posted on | March 15, 2007 |

A system for uncovering and then getting back to the stuff I actually like

I’m going to detail the process by which I acquire, manage, and listen to ambient music. I don’t think there’s anything particularly brilliant or even clever about the way I handle things. And parts of it are a bit messy, especially to the librarian in me. But maybe this might be useful to readers trying to deal with large amounts of music.

Most everything I listen to these days comes from my eMusic Premium account which gets me 90 downloads for $19.99. I’m grandfathered in to the old rate, as now they offer only 75 downloads a month at $19.99. For my purposes, this is a pretty reasonable deal. So, after I grab my tracks, here’s what happens:

All of the tracks are imported into and labelled “ambient” in iTunes. The music lives on a 2 year old 15″ Apple PowerBook, and is backed up to a 250GB Lacie external Firewire harddrive. A smart playlist is populated for each month’s downloads, where anything downloaded within the current month and labelled ambient is automatically added. The playlist is synched to a 1G 4GB iPod Nano.

As I listen to music, the tracks that stand out to me are rated from 1 to 5 stars. When synching the iPod with the PowerBook, my recent track plays are sent to last.fm. I like the idea of having this data on the network rather than locked inside iTunes. I only wish there was a more powerful way to connect the two. The rating system works as follows:

  • 1 star means I’m not interested in hearing the track again.
  • 2 stars is essentially meaningless, though slightly more meaningful than no rating. 2 stars means I don’t really like it, but it’s not bad enough to throw out. I may end up hearing it again and making a decising to raise or lower the rating.
  • 3 stars means I definitely would like to hear the track again.
  • 4 stars means I think the track is oustanding.
  • 5 stars means the track is basically as good as it gets for me.

I then create playlists based on stars. I’ll fill the iPod with the 3 star or greater playlist, which means by definition the 4 and 5 star tracks are transferred. If I’m feeling like I want to listen a bit more broadly, I’ll listen to the 3 star playlist. If I’m in the mood to hear familiar, favorite tracks, I’ll play the 5 star playlist.

This has been a fairly useful way of uncovering music I like and finding it again for later listens. The rating system also forces me to be a bit more of an active listener, which in turn helps me refine my preferences and gives me things to talk about on this site.

Comments

One Response to “Listening to ambient music with eMusic, iTunes, and an iPod”

  1. David P
    March 19th, 2007 @ 10:43 am

    Thanks, this is good to read. I should take advantage of the star system on my iPod.

    I have an “ambient” playlist on my Nano… is there a way to shuffle songs *just* within that playlist?

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