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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I always thought music streaming services craft the song radio playlists carefully using algorithms that take song genre, beat and melody patterns, artist relations etc into consideration.

Well color me surpised when I quickly downloaded the song radio playlist of "Tunak Tunak Tun" by Daler Mehndi for a car trip and played it in the car.

The first song was ofc said indie indian pop song. The second one I was like, ok, a little different genre but ok??? (PPAP - Pen Pinapple Apple Pen).

By the third one I was confused. First "take on me" starts, I turn it up because what the heck, doesn't fit the theme at all but good song anyway, and then a twelve-year-old starts ear-raping me about mining minecraft diamonds:

It seems I was the last human to figure out those streaming services base the song radios on what other people group the song into playlists, not any method of paragraph one.

This was confirmed by the rest of the playlist makeup:

(Two other songs by Daler Mehndi)

Tri Ploski

Two songs with pewdipie

Both the russian and soviet national anthems (by the same artist, listed seperately)

7th element (twice, once english, once russian)

Axel F

The Angry Birds theme

Multiple common Youtube soundtracks

Etc, you get the picture.

This is when I understood that most Tidal listeners who have added this song to a playlist, have it in their meme playlist.

Go figure...

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[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

Mentioned a few solid ones in another thread. Ignore the Pelican and Russian Circles (those are more ambient rock) but the rest should be good:

https://lemmy.world/comment/11389877

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

You rock! Thanks!

this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2024
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