I’m assuming everyone here listens to music somewhat regularly, but I’m curious about how much you care about it. And i specifically want to know about your enjoyment regardless if it’s considered a timeless masterpiece or just a meme song. (feel free to share you favorite artists while respecting other’s tastes)
Do you care about having decent enough devices to enjoy it or do you just buy the cheapest pair of earbuds to silence the world around you?
Do you have favorite albums or do you just hit play on a random playlist and zone out?
Do you ever listen to music just to enjoy it and nothing else?
Do you talk with passion about your favorite songs/albums/artists?
Do you spend time searching for music?
TL;DR is music art or content to you?
I care about music. I look for new stuff I enjoy. I listen to albums. I think about the lyrics. I see bands live when they tour. Sometimes I make mixes with a theme.
I used to ask people sometimes if they made mixes, and if so where they fell on the spectrum of “these are some songs I like” and “each songs inclusion and ordering has been carefully considered”.
I don’t just hit shuffle or let an algorithm wander through music. Songs are like spells and different tunes evoke different feelings.
I don’t relate to people when they say they like “all kinds of music” or “I listen to a dozen new songs every day”. That’s just not enough time spent with those new songs to form any sort of bond, for me.
I only have a couple friends who have what I call an interoperable relationship with music. It’s not that we like the same music, but that the music we each like, we like in a mutually comprehensible way. Like I can say to my friend, "oh this song could go right next to that song because xyz ", and they’ll be like “oh that’s good. abc fits in with them, too”.
My other friends, talking about music, at most I get a “cool song, bro”.
I absolutely love how you talk about music, and i 100% agree that when you find a good song you have to take your time to appreciate it
Glad to hear others still make mixes (I still call them mixtapes, because otherwise I feel like I’m claiming to be doing something fancier than I am). My last project was a story told in 16 mixtapes. So definitely someone who picks a theme when I make them
I love music. I can keep a beat fairly well, but I’m no musician. I listened to music quite often just to hear it in the background. As a kid growing up, it was like that. Seems to me, there was always a radio on in the background if we weren’t watching TV.
I listen to most anything. Except for newer pop country or rock-country. I’m just about to hit 50, so my taste jumps around a bit. From Tool to Kenny Rodgers. Neil Diamond to Weird Al. They Might Be Giants to Deftones. Roy Orbison to Metallica. Talking Heads to Attila.
I’ll put music on if I’m: doing the dishes, taking a shower, at work, diving, cooking, mowing the lawn, house chores.
It would most definitely suck the day I can’t listen to music anymore!!
Deftones rock! Hell yeah
i don’t care about music.
I generally like music, some kinds more than other kinds. I’m especially fond of novelty music such as Weird Al.
But I don’t usually go out of my way to listen to music. Not even when driving. (But my wife sometimes does which I enjoy.)
But really it’s just not a big part of my life.
It’s both art and content for me. I listen to a very wide range of genres; from metal to jazz, EDM, prog, industrial, film scores, kpop, and more. Streaming platforms have a hard time profiling me just based on the stuff I listen to.
I’m also a musican, so it’s my “art” as well, because I create it to express myself. It’s been a huge part of my entire life.
I’m a music whore.
I am a self-taught vocalist of 19 years going of hobby. I tend to attribute many songs as themes for emotions, people, and all assortment of things.
I wouldn’t say I’m an audiophile though, because I know peak audio quality is 320kbps and CD-quality alone is more than sufficient. I also really care enough to want as clear of a sound as possible.
I am also one of the few that has a hard time tiring out of some songs, even when I’ve listened to them over hundreds of times. Additionally, I am melting in the new experience of new songs I discover or that have been released for the first time.
And I think platforms like Spotify are shit.
I care, a lot. But this wasn’t always the case.
Before I was 13, I didn’t care much about music at all. Sure, I liked some songs I heard on the radio but I didn’t own any albums in any format. I considered music to be a harmless but mostly pretty meaningless.
Then my 7th grade music teacher gave me a really low grade, on the sole basis that I couldn’t sing in tune or play an instrument. I got good grades on the written tests, but this apparently meant nothing to her.
So purely out of spite I decided to learn how to play an instrument and sing. Getting music classes wasn’t an option due to my parent’s economic situation at the time, so I used my savings and bought my friend’s old acoustic guitar. I found good intro books from the library and started practicing.
I listened to the radio and recorded a few acoustic guitar songs on tape, so I could practice playing and singing along with them. This must have been a terrible few years for my family, but slowly I started to get the hang of it.
During this time I discovered some bands I really liked and copied their albums from LP’s from the library. My dad brought me an old discarded boombox from his work, it was big but had an excellent sound. I also scrounged enough money to buy a secondhand Walkman, so I could carry the music with me.
In high school I formed a few bands with my friends, I played rhythm guitar or bass, depending on the genre. We weren’t good, but I loved it. In university I had a chance to minor in music, which opened up whole new worlds for me. I learned to sing properly and had piano lessons.
By this time music had become a big part of my identity. I almost always had something playing on the background, if I wasn’t listening actively.
Nowadays I don’t have as much time for music as I’d like, but I’ve got myself a really good vintage Hi-Fi setup. It’s amazing to discover small things in songs I never noticed before in songs I have listened for decades. My gear may not look like much, but it’s got what counts.
When I was younger, I couldn’t afford good gear but now that I have some musical education and have learned to listen", I can’t really enjoy the music if the sound system is crappy. If it’s in the background it’s fine, but I just can’t use bad headphones anymore.
I listen to music from a large variety of genres, but hiphop/rap is something I just can’t get into. I’ve tried several times to approach it with an open mind, but there’s something in that genre that just rubs me the wrong way.
I don’t care if the music is a jokey meme thing or considered a masterpiece of it’s genre, if it clicks with you it’s good. I love symphonies as much as I love old simple folk tunes.
Without music there would be no grace in the world. It is my church. Without music life would be diminished, not augmented.
I m with you in the same church
I usually only listen to music when I’m doing something else, like driving.
I listen to a lot of game audio or background music though I couldn’t tell you who the artists are, only what game/movie they’re from.
I think that puts me into the ‘not really a music person’ category.
- Equipment: yeah, I have a decent set of speakers at home and headphones to listen while on the move. Sound quality matters, so a decent set is worth it for me.
- Albums vs random: I got used to listening stuff album-wise (with some albums not doing listening to their entirety takes away from the experience). As for favorites:
- “Feathers & Flesh” and “Dance Devil Dance” by Avatar,
- “Dead & Alive” by Parasite Inc.,
- “Faceless” and “The Oracle” - Godsmack.
- “Mezmerize” - SOAD
- Listening as the only activity: yeah, though more often than not I listen to music to drown out the world.
- Talk with others about it: too often. Though I’m afraid there’s very little ppl in my immediate surroundings that can dig into what I listen to 😅
- Spending time searching for music: not anymore, have a base I enjoy.
- Art or content: art. The feeling of chills going down my spine on a particularily well-constructed chorus / instrumental part is like no other feeling for me.
- I have the nicest listening devices I can afford to enjoy my music but on the go whatever works is sufficient.
- I have a plenty of favourites but I mostly listen to internet radio streams. Those are usually defined by genre or are just regular radios that play random stuff you can’t control
- Doing nothing but listening to the music is the best way to listen to music. Unfortunately real life is usually too busy for that.
- I don’t really have super favourites to the degree that I passionately talk about them but I do passionately advocate for art generally
- I keep a note of artists and albums to search and then I will occasionally download their stuff for my archive
I think music is art although there seems to be a lot of “music” being made purely for content purposes these days, especially now that ai music is starting to invade streaming platforms. So I guess perhaps some new music is just content slop
One of my main hobbies. Not just that, but my method of dealing with emotions, focusing, working effectively, expressing myself, preventing boredom, taking my mind off the world, bringing me up when I feel down, it’s my main source of enjoyment, main source of happiness, my culture, my community. I enjoy learning about it, absorbing content, creating it, playing it. I even mod two communities here and post to other peoples’.
So yeah, it’s pretty much my entire life at this point. Wouldn’t be here without it. I probably spend more time awake, listening to music, then not. And when I’m not, I permanently have a song playing in my head.
To answer your question about devices, I like to listen through devices that allow me to get as close to the way the artist intended it, as possible. Whether it be good-quality peripherals, listening digitally or listening to vinyl.
The irony is, a lot of music I gravitate towards has many imperfections, which to me, is what makes it human, real, and ALIVE. It is far more powerful at conveying true emotion and is thus more meaningful. So even when listening to music which was poorly recorded to begin with, I still prefer listening through good quality speakers for example, because it is more true to the original sound.
I hear it when it’s playing on a car radio or in an ad or on some show, and I acknowledge how music can spur an emotional response when used effectively, but I don’t regularly listen to it.
I’m assuming everyone here listens to music somewhat regularly
As somebody who does not regularly listen to music, I am curious why you would make this assumption.
The more i think about it the more i realize that it’s actually a really weak assumption. It just felt weird to me that you could have a routine that didn’t include music in it, totally mb
I maintain like a dozen playlists with specific vibes. I constantly try to discover new music, whether through algorithms or active searching. When I find a really good album I’ll just sit and listen, maybe doing something that doesn’t require concentration.
There are bands that I really like that I bring up all the time. When I find a new one, I’m telling everyone who might like them. There are some I’ll listen to over and over, and some I ration to try not to burn out.
I like great art, but I’m also down with meme music and other goofy shit.
re: art vs. content: I’m not sure of the distinction you’re making. Can you explain what you mean?
I worded it weirdly, art and content are basically the same thing, what changes is your perception of it, it’s up to you to decide if it’s something caring more about it, made by passionate people or just sound with cool patters that makes our brain feel good. (Maybe still a weird explanation)
I’m a believer in “found art” and a lover of natural beauty, so I’m gonna say that to me, the brain-feel-good-patterns is closer to the core than craft is. So, art more than content, I suppose.






