Website Review: Musicovery
After I installed the Stumbleupon toolbar and chose music as an interest, I was blessed in that the first site I stumbled upon was Musicovery.com. The site is simple to operate, with a rectangular control panel on the left side of the screen and songs positioned on a sort of road map on
the rest of the screen. The music map moves when you click and drag it to reveal other songs offscreen. Follow me through a tour of the site.
On the top of the control box one can choose between lo-fi Musicovery, which consists of 32 kbit/s tracks and hi-fi, which plays 28kbit/s tracks. Lo-fi is free and hi-fi costs various prices depending on subscription length. Prices are listed in Euros.
Below fidelity choice are three boxes labeled "hit," "non hit" and "discovery." Below that is what looks like an old pre-LED display radio dial which is labeled by decades that you can choose or allow music from different time periods. Then comes the really unique part. A large gray rectangle contains the following music descriptions on an axis: "energetic," "dark," "calm" and "positive." Clicking anywhere in the box changes the mood of the music that comes up. The gray in the box changes color on each side depending on the mood represented.
Below the mood box is a check box labeled "all genres." Under that are various genres labeled along a color spectrum ranging from rap, which is bright red, and in a clockwise direction down the rainbow until violet, which is R&B. One can click as many genres as desired or just one, or leave all of them checked.
I set the mood between dark and calm and leave all genres checked. The songs that immediately come up include "Miss Perfumado," by Cesaria Evora, Bill Withers's "Let Me Be the One You Need," "Mocking Bird" by Eminem, Van Morrison's "What is Wrong With this Picture" and K's Choice's "Not an Addict." As each song plays a small shot of the album from which it came pops up. Under the album cover is a link to Amazon, one to iTunes, and a play/pause button. The links to Amazon and iTunes open in new tabs. Each song in the map is colored based on the color of its genre in the spectrum. Clicking on a song causes the song to play.
On the top of the control box one can choose between lo-fi Musicovery, which consists of 32 kbit/s tracks and hi-fi, which plays 28kbit/s tracks. Lo-fi is free and hi-fi costs various prices depending on subscription length. Prices are listed in Euros.
Below fidelity choice are three boxes labeled "hit," "non hit" and "discovery." Below that is what looks like an old pre-LED display radio dial which is labeled by decades that you can choose or allow music from different time periods. Then comes the really unique part. A large gray rectangle contains the following music descriptions on an axis: "energetic," "dark," "calm" and "positive." Clicking anywhere in the box changes the mood of the music that comes up. The gray in the box changes color on each side depending on the mood represented.
Below the mood box is a check box labeled "all genres." Under that are various genres labeled along a color spectrum ranging from rap, which is bright red, and in a clockwise direction down the rainbow until violet, which is R&B. One can click as many genres as desired or just one, or leave all of them checked.
I set the mood between dark and calm and leave all genres checked. The songs that immediately come up include "Miss Perfumado," by Cesaria Evora, Bill Withers's "Let Me Be the One You Need," "Mocking Bird" by Eminem, Van Morrison's "What is Wrong With this Picture" and K's Choice's "Not an Addict." As each song plays a small shot of the album from which it came pops up. Under the album cover is a link to Amazon, one to iTunes, and a play/pause button. The links to Amazon and iTunes open in new tabs. Each song in the map is colored based on the color of its genre in the spectrum. Clicking on a song causes the song to play.
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