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October 30, 2006

from Wired -- The Day the Music Died:
I thought at first I had misheard him. "... library of 90,000 songs, and iTunes can't handle it." [...] I had no idea people were amassing collections of this size. My own paltry iTunes library runs just shy of 500 songs -- a little over a day and a half of music -- and that includes every selection from Pipes of the Edinburgh Military Tattoo. Now, I spend a lot of time listening to music, but like most people I tend to play my favorites a lot.

Research I have seen supports that writer's number. 500 songs is about the average.

I remember times in my life where I had a strictly limited music collection, and I kept things fresh by listening at finer and finer levels of detail. Those days should be over for most of us, though. It's important for individuals to grow their collections past the "enough" marker, whether that's 50,000 songs or even just 500, because at that point you stop listening in the old way.

The new way is to treat music more like a newspaper than a book, so that a continuous stream of fresh content is intrinsic to the media. If you hear a good hook somewhere, the next day you should find that hook remixed into another song. You should never again, post 20th century, post the era when music and manufactured goods were synonomous, think of music as something so static that 500 songs could encompass it.

The idea that a 500 song collection makes sense is based on a misunderstanding of the medium. Maybe you'll only have 500 songs on hand at any one time -- that makes sense. But which songs those are should be a constantly rotating subset of a gigantic collection which lives out in the cloud.


What I'm listening to today is the song collection at CC 365.


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