Musicovery

Musicovery is an interactive and customised webradio service. Listeners rate songs, resulting in a personalized programme.[1] Reviewers have commented that unlike services that are governed by the user's choice of artist or genre, this method results in more discovery of artists to which the user might not otherwise have been exposed; The Washington Post's reviewer gave the example of "segueing from a West Coast R&B band to a folkrock group from Algeria".[1][2] Musicovery provides dance mix — with the ability to specify the desired dance tempo —[3] and similar artist features, as well as the option of a low fidelity free service or a premium service with better sound.[1][2] Users have the option to limit the selection to a specific year or range of years, as well as to deselect any genre, and genres are color-keyed to the graphic interface.[4] At least one U.S. newspaper reported that major advertising agency JWT listed Musicovery on its 2007 list of "80 things to watch in 2008," a list of trends and new products and services;[5] however, the article does not indicate whether the agency had any business relationship with companies on the list. The webradio service is accessible on mobile phone (on 3G/Symbian Nokia Devices) iPhone and iPod Touch. Music files provided by the service are streamed, not downloaded, and the listener can buy all the songs played or tagged as favorite from major online music retailers iTunes, Amazon, and eBay.

Musicovery
Screenshot of Musicovery in use.
Type of site
Internet radio
URLhttp://musicovery.com/
RegistrationOptional

Announcement

January 2. 2017 Musicovery announced on facebook it closed its webradio, and is currently only working as B2B in supplying playlists to other streaming services.

We are sad to announce to our users that Musicovery is closing its smart radio.

Musicovery is now focusing on providing to other music services its recommendation and playlist engine.We thank all listeners for their support. We hope you enjoyed the trip !

The text below has not been edited to show that the service is no longer available to end-users.

History

Musicovery was founded by Vincent Castaignet and Frédéric Vavrille. They combined their technology in January 2006 to create the internet site Musicovery.com. Castaignet has created the "Mood pad", a proprietary technology enabling listeners to find intuitively music matching their mood (see Technology). Vavrille is the creator of Liveplasma.com, a graphic discovery engine. Liveplasma was created in 2004 and is a graphical interface based on Liveplasma technology. The Liveplasma technology creates a graphical map of possible tastes, with songs most likely to please the user appearing closer to the current song on the visual map than songs less similar.[4]

Musicovery webradio was beta-tested in June 2006 and launched in November 2006.

After four years, a completely redesigned Musicovery website was launched in July 2010. The new version does not feature Liveplasma technology, and has many fewer features available in the free version of the site.[6]

An iPhone application was launched in September 2010.

In January 2017 Musicovery closed its services to end-users and is now only supplying playlists to other streaming providers.

The Musicovery team is based in Paris, France.[2]

Technology

Musicovery relies on proprietary technology developed by its founders:

  • The "mood pad" technology: a music description methodology that enables to position any song on a 2 dimension continuous space (the “mood pad”); songs are described with 40 musical parameters; The technology is the result of 3-year research on music description and human acoustic perception.

The streaming music is at low quality 32kbit/s on the free platform, and at good quality 128kbit/s on the paid platform.[7]

International service

The music catalogs are specific for each country and the site is translated in local languages (English, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, German, and French). The interface is adapted to local specifications where appropriate (for instance, country and folk genres are added for the US audience). The popularity scale of each song, a parameter influencing music programming, is specific to each country.

While critics generally have praised the site's graphic interface, ability to make unusual but fitting song suggestions, and innovation in using mood as a grouping strategy,[1][2][4][8] one otherwise favorable review complained of the "limited overall title base".[8] Another reviewer noted that the technology used to classify each song by mood had its limitations, observing that the service "persists in, for example, believing that "Crazy Frog" puts me in a good mood, whereas this techno air instead gives me a death wish."[9]

Premium Features

  • Skipping
    • Banning a song skips it automatically
    • Songs can also be skipped by removing them from the map
  • High quality audio
  • Play only favorite songs
  • Play any song on the map at any time
  • No ads
  • Access artist and song info

Notes

  1. Kate Russell."Webscape" (column), BBC News, February 22, 2007. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
  2. Rob Pegoraro. "Jukebox With Hit Potential – Free Online Service Fine-Tunes Music to Listener's Tastes," The Washington Post (DC), August 16, 2007, Financial section, page D1.
  3. "What's online" (column), Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA), March 12, 2007, Life and Arts section, page E8.
  4. Brian Hipp. "Graph Web sites are real eye-pleasers," The Herald (Rock Hill, SC), December 4, 2006, Technology section, page 4B.
  5. D.L. Stewart. "Radically transparent predictions for 2008," Dayton Daily News (OH), January 18, 2008, Life section, page D7.
  6. http://absorbtheweb.com/musicovery-major-website-facelift/
  7. http://www.musicovery.com/tarifs.php
  8. Stéphane Viossat. "Pour animer une soirée entre amis, ce site n'a pas son pareil. Spécialiste de l'ambiance, Musicovery se façonne peu à peu aux goûts musicaux de ses utilisateurs" ("To liven up an evening with friends, this site is without peer. Mood specialist Musicovery works little by little with the musical tastes of its users"), 01net, Micro Hebdo (n. 516), March 21, 2008. (In French.) Retrieved 2008-07-01.
  9. Olivier Levard. "Internet – Musicovery, la webradio de vos émotions" ("Musicovery, the webradio of your moods"), TF1.LCI, April 11, 2007. (In French.) Retrieved 2008-07-01.

Additional references

gollark: I think a big one is RXI's JSON thing, although that got obsoleted on newer versions by `textutils.unserialiseJSON` or whatever it is.
gollark: The particularly good ones are generally from other people.
gollark: Well, I have some libraries, I don't think they're mostly all that *useful*.
gollark: `a_function("string with spaces")` or even `a_function "string with spaces"` which is neat.
gollark: The same way as usual?
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