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I bought one of his CDs for £8.50, played one track for about 20 seconds before remembering that he can't sing and sounds horrible. He's earned the equivalent of £10,200 an hour from me. I hope he's grateful.
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I don't have a lot of data on my phone contract so I find the option to download albums over wifi useful.
The price per month is about the cost of 2 albums so I think it's good value.
Currently am using Google Play Music, which is pretty much the same thing, although I think Spotify edges it for getting hold of the new releases first.
Frank Ocean's Blonde album arrived on Google Play Music around 3 weeks after it was available on Spotify.
For me the reason that Spotify wins (I trialled them all) is how good the 'Discover Weekly', weekly 'New Release Radar' and the 4 different Daily playlists it creates for you based on things you add to your library or listen to.
That said I'm trialling Amazon Music Unlimited because its integration with Alexa is so good. I am leaning toward sticking with Spotify though currently. I pay for a family account so that Mrs O's and the lads' listening doesn't screw up my suggestions and Spotify-generated playlists.
Just pay it - easily worth it.
You could only get it at home, not on your phone or anything -- which suits me.
So I guess my £5 a month sub's days are numbered. Boo!
TBH free isn't bad.
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Easy to make playlists, and if friends are round you can make a playlist to play during a meal and then let them have their own choice of music after. And your living room isn't strewn with open CD cases when you wake up with a hangover next day.
One great function people new to it may be unaware of, is that you can make hundreds of songs available for offline listening. Means you can store albums or playlists on an IPad or phone and then play them back through headphones on a train, plane or when out for a walk, without needing a 3G or other connection.
It's true it means you don't own music but I have about 2,000 cds stored in the house that never get played and are probably worth very little now, so ownership isn't something I value or miss.