who is much harder to decode
Von wu324234, 10:14Whatever the algorithmic equation, of course, there's a listener on the other end who is much harder to decode. What you want to hear can depend on your mood, or whether you're listening at work or in a nightclub. Pandora Necklaces Context affects any cultural product, but music is different from, say, books or movies. Even a casual listener hears many thousands of songs; and to love a song is to take it in — whether attentively or as background music — over and over. Mick Jagger was once asked what makes a tune a classic, and the co-author of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" replied, "Repetition." And yet, even the most conservative listener Pandora Jewelry On Saleknows the feeling of hearing a hit single once too often. Maybe because music is so ubiquitous, we respond to it almost like food: sometimes we want to try the new restaurant, sometimesPandora Silver the comfort of a familiar favorite dish.
Still, are all these listener-specific factors really enough to explain what music we like, and why? "Music is an inherently social experience," argues David Goodman, the president of CBS Interactive Music Group, which includes the popular LastBuy Pandora Bracelets .fm Internet radio service. Last.fm's social-networking model revolves largely around this idea. "The way in which you experience music by sharing, by storytelling, being part of a community. Last.fm is built on what is organic to music."
Ali Partovi, the C.E.O. of iLike, makes a related point. Used as an application on Facebook and similar sites, iLike bills itself as a "social music-discovery service" and claims more than 50 million registered users. Buy Pandora Charms There's a huge difference, Partovi argues, between "this computer thinks you'll like this song" and "your friend thinks you'll like this song — even if it's the same song."
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