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  • Chowing down on music with playlists as utensils

    I’m a glutton. I want to take in everything at once in huge gulps. I’m not even done with one bite before I want another one.  I should stop to savor, but I just have a hard time with self-control.

    I have the same problem with music.  I want to listen to everything at once, and in the days when I listened to CDs, I would listen to a minute or two of one song before that reminded me of another song that I wanted to listen to immediately.  I would listen to music for hours, but rarely, if ever, finish a full song.

    Things are a little bit different now that I’m totally digital. The fact that iTunes won’t mark a song as played until it’s reached the very end of the song means that I’ll listen to a full song so that I can give it credit, which satisfies the part of me obsessed with stats.

    But things are also a little different now in that I can no longer look at a few hundred CDs and decide what to listen to, and no longer have a car with 10 CDs that I never change out, meaning that it’s harder to get to know songs very well.  If I don’t like things right off the bat, I have all of my favorite music right in my iPod to listen to.  It’s too tempting to just switch something off if it doesn’t immediately impress.

    I’ve turned to playlists made in iTunes to help me discover and re-discover music and to allow me to be a total glutton, to just open up my ears and let the music slide in.  Now that my library’s over 21,000 songs, I need to be reminded of what I haven’t listened to, and with the speed at which I’m adding stuff, I need something that will force me to re-listen to things; to give them a chance for a while and let them sink in.

    The first playlist is a little complex, but it’s one of my favorites.  I call it Recent Radio, and it’s the substitute for listening to CDs in my car.  It takes everything from the current year, won’t play anything I’ve listened to in the last few days, makes songs move off of the list after two months, but keeps the songs that I’ve rated three songs or above in for four months (to provide a little more of that “this songs reminds me of this year” spice).  The recipe takes three different playlists, thanks to iTunes not allowing for “unless” statements in their playlists.

    Playlist One: “Radio all”
    Match all of the following rules:

    • Year is 2008 (or whatever the current year is, obviously)
    • Date Added is in the last 2 months
    • Last Played is not in the last 4 days
    • Rating is not 2 stars
    • Rating is not 1 star (so that I can remove anything from the playlist that I don’t want to hear anymore)

    Playlist #2: “Radio Select”
    Match all of the following rules:

    • Year is 2008
    • Rating is greater than two stars
    • Last Played is not in the last 4 days
    • Date Added is in the last 4 months

    Playlist #3: “Recent Radio” (this is the one that combines the two)
    Match any of the following rules:

    • Playlist is “Radio All”
    • Playlist is “Radio Select”

    These playlists give me a fantastic stroll through all of the music from the year, forcing me to listen to stuff that I might otherwise ignore.

    But what about the thousands of other songs in my library?  There’s tons of stuff in there that I love, but my constant curiosity about new music keeps me from really listening.  For this, I recently came up with my “Random Neglected” playlist:

    • Last played is not in the last 12 months
    • Rating is not one star
    • Rating is not two stars
    • Limit to 100 items
    • Skip count is in the range 0 to 8
    • Last skipped is not in the last 3 months

    It’s extremely simple, but even as I listen to it now, I get huge spoonfuls of songs that I haven’t listened to in at least a year.  It takes in my Never Played playlist as well, and gives me an incredible overview of my library, while not taking in some of the stuff that I’ve given more than enough attention to. UPDATE: I found that I was having trouble when, if I skipped over a song, it stayed on the playlist, so I added in the last two conditions, so that if I skip a track, it expires from the playlist and doesn’t show up again for another six months.

    Obviously, you could change these playlists to suit your own tastes.  If you aren’t as into new music as I am, you could simply remove the “Year is 2008″ from the Radio playlists and just have a good overview of the music you’ve added in.  You could decrease the time of the neglected playlist to let a little more in.

    I’m telling you this only because it’s extremely important and could well save your life one day.  I hope to God you read the whole thing.


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    3 Responses to “Chowing down on music with playlists as utensils”

    1. I did! I did read the whole thing! Can this entry also be used as a flotation device?

      I am not diligent about rating, but along these lines, I have gotten great use out of a simple “not played yet” playlist (especially on dogwalks) after your mention of the idea.

      I do make a playlist for each month (0803, 0804, etc. so they conveniently appear in sequence). This is good for enjoying a sampling of the recent stuff, and it also helps organize the year-end review. Flipping through those playlists one at a time is like revisiting the year in general in 30-day increments, not just the musical year.

    2. This entry can indeed be used as a flotation device. Also, it comes in handy as a spice rack, an HDMI cable or a safety lock for your handgun.

      What’s in each of your playlist for each month? I have a number of playlists that help me out with my year-end lists: my 2008 music (all albums that came out in 2008) and my 2008 HOF, which is all the music that I rated three stars or above, which I sort by play count, and it gives a pretty honest view of my favorite stuff of the year.

      I know I’ve talked about it before, but I do find that rating stuff is incredibly useful. Then again, that “Random Neglected” playlist has been great. All the stuff that I never would have gotten back to just because it’s not rated pops up again.

      There is a slight update to that playlist that I’ll put in the post.

    3. your study in logic made my head hurt. but i think i am better at sudoku now. thanks.

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