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#youtube music playlist
mijikai12 · 2 months
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-> Playlist name ideas
you’re on repeat
cuthroat
nvm
my hopes are nightmares
hallways
cross my name out
crosswalk
people hate me
something else
im wrong
helping doesnt work
cookies
swimming the clouds
love my soulmate
carrotcake
eye scream
u know what? idc
ghost in my closet
call it what you like
i feel great
i cant help you
bring me down
downstairs bedroom
uh i think i died
not OK
evry thing is brking down on me
children in pink
open up
i nEEd u
the water is screaming
emergency room
-> Some Images to go with your playlist
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randomvarious · 1 month
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1990s House Playlist
Alright, folks, this is the week where I add a bunch of sweet bangers to this slowly growing 90s house playlist of mine, almost all of which come from one of my favorite dance mixes of all time, Dimitri From Paris' Monsieur Dimitri's De-Luxe House of Funk, which was released back in 1997 by biblical electronic music monthly Mixmag as part of their own Mixmag Live series.
Now, you can't find most of the tracks from this mix on Spotify, but luckily there's still one that you can: Parisian Bob Sinclar's "Visions of Paradise," which predates his making of really annoying tracks, like his update on C&C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)," by a whole bunch of years 🤢. This one, though, is a pretty perfect track for the middle of any late 90s house mix. Bob sampled the vocal from a 1991 house track of the same name by a Long Island duo called Island Noyze Productions, and he imported a retro streak from a few-second portion of Brooklyn disco-funk band Brass Construction's scorchingly uptempo 1976 tune, "Sambo." But he also mixes those samples with some surging orchestral strings that sound like they were definitely sampled off of some other old record too. Great stuff that has over 193,000 plays on Spotify right now.
Bob Sinclar - "Visions of Paradise"
But while there's only one tune from that legendary Dimitri mix on Spotify, the rest of them can be found on YouTube. And a few of those happen to be remixes that were done by Dimitri himself, like his "Enchanted Forest" mix of Björk's "Isobel," which prior to its inclusion on his own mix, could only be found on a 12-inch single version of "Isobel" that had only been released in France in 1995. Currently, there's only one copy of that record up for sale on Discogs, going for over $300 🤑. But the version I included here, which comes directly from Dimitri's mix, has about 7,400 plays on YouTube.
And another superb tune is Glasgow native Paul Hunter's "May the Funk Be With You," which he released as Second Crusade in 1996. This is a track that samples from two different songs: 1976's "Intergalactic Love Song," by Charles Earland, which supplies the tune's delightfully whiny and full synth, and Denise LaSalle's own 1980 song, "May the Funk Be With You," which is responsible for its lovely vocals. Older sounds blended with a modern house beat. Really excellent track that's currently sitting at a little over 85,000 plays on YouTube 😌.
Cheb Khaled - "N'ssi N'ssi (Jamming The Casbah Mix)" Bjork - "Isobel (Dim's Enchanted Forest)" Second Crusade - "May the Funk Be With You" Morning Kids - "Free Lovin'" Teddy G - "Captain Dobbey" Brand New Heavies - "Sometimes (Monsieur D's Underground Behaviour Mix)"
Check out the YouTube playlist here, and check it out on YouTube Music here.
So this new update brings us to 15 songs that clock in at an hour and 42 minutes on Spotify, but on YouTube, we're now up to 35 songs that lasts for 4 hours and 8 minutes. So you know which of these is the better option, even if Spotify is the more convenient one.
Next week, New York!
Enjoy!
More to come, eventually. Stay tuned!
Like what you hear? Follow me on Spotify and YouTube for more cool playlists and uploads!
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nixii-sabre · 3 months
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SO PISSED OFF to find there was NO solar ash playlists on youtube. So I made my own!
| "ᵀʰᵉ ᶜˡᵒᵘᵈˢ ʸᵒᵘ ᵈᵃⁿᶜᵉ ᵒⁿ ᵃʳᵉ ᵗʰᵉ ʳᵉᵐᵃⁱⁿˢ ᵒᶠ ᵒᵘʳ ʰᵒᵐᵉ." - Solar Ash Playlist | (youtube.com)
Hope everyone who listens in enjoys <3
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jebosexy69 · 1 year
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figonas · 2 years
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I have a Spotify request or maybe just a song if it's not enough for a whole playlist. You have to kill your best friend for the greater good
for the greater good
I’m sorry, I’m so sorry
SPOTIFY | YOUTUBE MUSIC
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Admittedly one of my shorter playlists but I’m really happy with the result on this one. Also this request was so specific that I gotta ask uhh anon, you writing something?? It sounds like something I’d be very interested in reading 👀
FOLLOW ME ON SPOTIFY
I TAKE PLAYLIST REQUESTS
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celebchatter360 · 3 months
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Trippie Redd's Vibe Odyssey: A YouTube Music Playlist of Emotive Rhythms & Lyrical Fire
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rsviral · 1 year
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40 Best Desi Hip Hop Mp3 Songs This Year 2022
40 Best Desi Hip Hop Mp3 Songs This Year 2022
Download Desi hip hop – Mp3 Song DIVINE, CarryMinati, Raftaar, Emiway Bantai, Sidhu Moose Wala at 320Kbps only on RohitSharma. Listen to desi hip hop songs, an exclusive playlist only on RohitSharma. Listen to or download the entire playlist on RohitSharma. Why is this hip-hop playlist right for you? And the answer is YouTube, we take this playlist of hip hop songs from YouTube music. Below you…
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dat-soldier · 5 months
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Guhh
adblockers rly arent working now... it's no longer a pop up window...
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would be a shame,,,,,,,,
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if i pressed the Embed button, revealing a smaller video player.........
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mlpoutofcontext · 9 months
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Pinkie Pie has become Catholic
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1driedpersimmon · 1 year
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L. A.fter B.eyond B.irthday
Playlist: X
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randomvarious · 2 months
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1990s German Trance Playlist (YouTube)
Chicago had house, Detroit had techno, and with both of those world-changing dance genres managing to resonate so profoundly throughout much of Europe, you just knew that that continent was gonna then take all that inspiration from those two styles and eventually create something of their own that could stick too. And the big genre that they came up with was trance, which in its earliest days, was heavily nurtured like no other in the city of Frankfurt, Germany.
Now, although he's not strictly known as a trance musician or DJ, it's safe to say that trance music would not exist in its current form if it weren't for the legendary Sven Väth. Sven, a native of Frankfurt, co-founded Harthouse Records in the early 90s with some other folks, and that label would then prove integral to both the rise and spread of trance and hard trance. Sven was someone who had spent many a vacation in the party capital of the world, Ibiza, Spain, and he had also been to the tiny, coastal Indian state of Goa as well, where the beach parties there had DJs spinning all sorts of psychedelic tunes in order to induce their revelers into a state of trance 😵.
And Harthouse's first release was a trance record by Sven himself, along with his trusty sidekick Ralf Hildenbeutel, who seemed to have more of the technological knowhow in order to make Sven's ideas into a reality. Together, under the name of Barbarella, they released "My Name Is Barbarella," a 1992 song that sampled a line of dialogue from the French-directed Jane Fonda sci-fi flick that they had taken their own name from, and also sounded deeply inspired by Ibiza as well. As an undisputed early trance classic, the 9-plus minute version of this one is currently sitting at over 163,000 plays across a bunch of different uploads on YouTube, and it's the song that kicks off this little ten-song playlist here.
And right after "My Name Is Barbarella" then came another Harthouse classic: "Spectrum," by Metal Master, which was a duo that Sven Väth was also a part of, along with one of Harthouse's other co-founders, Matthias Hoffmann. The record that this song comes from, Vol. 1, is the one that started to establish Harthouse's harder edge towards trance, as its first Barbarella release was actually a much softer affair. True to the name that they'd given themselves, Sven and Matthias seem to have incorporated some metal guitar into this one, in the form of long, atmospheric, and distorted chords, which when combined with string synths, really manage to cinch the whole song together, making for quite an astounding piece of dance music 🤩. Currently nearing 112,000 plays with its multiple uploads on YouTube.
But while those two tracks are wholly important in the history of trance music, I also bring them up here because Sven Väth's other halves from both of those duos happen to have trance tunes of their own that are excellent too. Ralf Hildenbeutel had a song that's really hard to believe was made all the way back in 1993—because it sounds so much more modern!—called "Hypnoticharmony (Part II)," which he released as Progressive Attack. As its title suggests, this one is indeed hypnotic, as well as deep, and more than any tune in this playlist that precedes it, also feels like a blueprint for what trance would soon become. And across multiple YouTube uploads, it currently has under 18,000 plays.
And Matthias Hoffmann's contribution is simply one of the most breathtaking pieces of trance that I've ever heard in my life. Back in 1994, he released a song as Brainchild called "Symmetry (C-Mix)," which was put out on another label that he and Sven Väth had also helped co-found called Eye Q Records, which was closely associated with Harthouse itself. Then in '99, "Symmetry C" was re-released on Multiply Records, a subsidiary of UK label Telstar, and on it came a whole bunch of remixes, including a "Breakbeat Remix" that was done by the UK's Lange. And this is a tune that currently brings the whole playlist full circle too, as it serves as the final song while also taking us back to trance's origin point of Frankfurt. Currently sitting at over 341,000 YouTube plays across many different uploads.
Now, we're almost done here, but I'd be remiss if I didn't, at the very least, make mention of a few more tracks on this thing, all of which come courtesy of Hardfloor, a duo from Cologne, who, although they'd become more known for their techno prowess, applied their mastery of the Roland TB-303 bass synthesizer (the machine that yields electronic music's famed acid squelch) to some trance tracks, including "Trancescript" and "Into the Nature," both of which appear on their acclaimed 1993 debut album, TB Resuscitation. "Trancescript" is currently at under 85,000 plays and "Into the Nature" has over 130,000. And I also included an excellent remix that they did of Chicago native Robert Armani's "Circus Bells" as well, which currently has over 146,000 plays.
This playlist is ordered as chronologically as possible.
Barbarella - "My Name Is Barbarella" Metal Master - "Spectrum" Hardfloor - "Trancescript" Hardfloor - "Into the Nature" Robert Armani - "Circus Bells (Remixed by Hardfloor)" Marco Zaffarano - "For My Love" Progressive Attack - "Hypnoticharmony (Part II)" Paul van Dyk - "Words (PvD's Words for Love Mix)" Pitchrider - "I Know" Brainchild - "Symmetry C (Lange Breakbeat remix)"
And this playlist is also on YouTube Music too.
So with this opening shot, we start with ten songs that clock in at a total of 75 minutes; a bunch of classic, historic tunes along with some that have lower play counts too.
And next week will not be nearly as much of a cohesive history lesson, but I'm planning on revisiting these German 90s with a slate of favorite techno bangers 👀.
Enjoy!
More to come, eventually. Stay tuned!
Like what you hear? Follow me on Spotify and YouTube for more cool playlists and uploads!
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xoxorealitygalore · 8 months
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you-need-not-apply · 4 months
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What are you favourite artists really getting paid?
A comparison of streaming platforms
Music plays an incredible part in shaping our society. From protest songs, educational rhymes, folk, classical, rock, techno, indie and disco music, it shapes our world view in a unique and powerful way. The way of listening to music has changed dramatically over the last one hundred and fifty years, from live bands on corners, to the invention of the radio, record players, CD’s, tapes, electronic music and now live streaming.
However, in a world where everything is about profit and popularity, the competition between streaming services is stiff. The pay ranges from awful to poor and as the algorithm evolves to recommend new artists to you, who is really making the most money?
The obvious answer is the streaming platform itself. Spotify wracked in a $18.68 billion (AUD) revenue in 2022 alone. Although Spotify don’t post their net profit, they did report a $391.2 (AUD) million loss in 2022, assuming this loss came from their initial revenue, Spotify should, theoretically, have made a staggering $18.28 billion dollar profit.
This leads us to the artists themselves, with such a large amount of profit and roughly 11 million artists on Spotify, we can only assume that split evenly and leaving a $2 billion (AUD)  dollar profit for Spotify themselves that each artist would be paid an average of $1480 AUD per year.
This is not the case. Spotify pays around $0.003 - $0.005 USD per stream, a pitiful amount. In fact, per 100,000 streams on Spotify an artist can only hope to gain around $300 - $500 USD. On top of this already insanely low number, Spotify practices a 70/30 model with an average of 70% of profit going to the artists themselves, while they take an additional 30%. This leaves us with around $210 - $350 USD profit.  The remaining royalties are then divided between the songwriters, publishers, and owners of the master recording. This could include the artist themselves, but it could also be the label they're signed to, leaving an even smaller profit for the artists themselves.
One of the most popular artists in the world, Taylor Swift, makes around $0.0043 USD per stream on her music. The highest paid artist, Drake, makes around $0.0049 USD per stream on his music. To be considered for having a ‘good number of streams’, an artist needs around 10,000 to 50,000 monthly listeners, however only 213,000 artists have hit this threshold out of the initial 11 million we discussed earlier.
In conclusion, Spotify is a scam. Buy physical items, such as CDs, records, merch, concert tickets etc, to truly support your favourite artist. And for god’s sake, don’t use Spotify
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absolutebloodychaos · 3 months
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I don't know if anyone else has found these yet but I though I should put these here if anyone wanted to check them out.
Kris' YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@krisgustin95
Jan's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@5hbarca
Bojan's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@bojancvjeticanin9303
The Bojan one I think is quite well known-ish, or at least it's somewhat easy to find cause he's got like Njen Korak on there, and the Jan one is the first thing that comes up when you search his name on YouTube but I recently accidentally came across the Kris one the other day and I thought that others might like to see it.
They're all legit or whatever, there's just one video on Bojan's (Njen Korak, it's a song he released when he was like 14 or whatever so he looks super young in the clip), two on Kris' (some guitar covers he did in the early years of the band, back in the 2017 hair days), and a bunch on Jan's one (I think all or mostly covers of other songs).
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sunshineandlyrics · 8 months
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youtube
💙 When a Video Editor is suppose to be reacting to the Silver Tongues MV but is distracted by Louis' voice and the song (9 August 2023)!
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celebchatter360 · 3 months
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Vibin' with The Kid LAROI: YouTube's Ultimate Rap Ride
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