Which one do you prefer?

I am seeing plenty of mixed opinions about both Spotify and Tidal. Some are saying Spotify is the best, others say it’s bloated, others think it’s annoying it’s also an app for podcasts. Some people really like Tidal, but I have mostly seen negative opinions about it - worse song recommendations, no difference in audio, too expensive.

As someone who doesn’t care very much for song recommendations I can’t decide which one is ideal for me personally. Tidal seems to pay artists better, but the criticism it receives makes me unsure. What do y’all think?

  • NegativeNull@lemm.ee@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    On average, TIDAL pays out around $0.013 per stream. link
    Spotify pays artists between $0.003 - $0.005 per stream on average. link

    I chose Tidal for that. They pay artists significantly more than Spotify does. Spotify also platforms Joe Rogan. F#%& that

  • xeddyx@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    I can’t speak much about the money making stuff, but I’ve read that most music artists make the majority of their income through touring and ticket sales for their live performances at venues, music festivals as well as attending other private events etc - and this goes back to even pre-Spotify days. So Spotify not paying artists well doesn’t really make a big difference. In fact, I’d argue that Spotify actually brings artists publicity, much like how mp3 sharing did back in the day, or the radio for that matter. I’ve discovered many artists via radio back in the day, much like how I discover them today via Spotify’s recommendations, and personally, I don’t see the issue.

    Anyways, as a former audiophile, I’ve decided to choose convenience over perceived audio quality, so I use Spotify. Mind you, it’s not like I don’t perceive any difference at all, but the point is, for my day-to-day listening, it makes little difference - especially when most of my listening is in generally noisy environments like at work or during my commute. Also, Spotify streams at 320kbps Ogg Vorbis (on a good connection) - you’d need to have really good ears and gear to actually hear a difference between that and an uncompressed stream. Even then, it’s not like it makes a difference if you’re say just listening to pop and rock music or something.

    It’s not like I’ve completely given up on lossless audio - I do use my audiophile gear when I’m in the mood and want to listen to certain tracks like say some of Pink Floyd atmospheric stuff like in A Momentary Lapse of Reason, or say John Williams, or classical music like Tchaikovsky or Vivaldi, but these are just a small fraction of my listening experience.

    So if you are blessed with the ears and gear to actually make out the difference between 320kbps ogg vs FLAC/DSD, AND you listen to the kind of music where it really matters AND you care enough about that difference that it affects your enjoyment - then sure, go for Tidal. Otherwise, there’s no point.

  • RalphWolf@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    After a few years on Spotify, I switched to Tidal.

    Issues I had with Spotify are:

    1. You can’t block a song, an artist or a band. Ridiculous really. For example, I dislike Kanye West and never want to hear his music, and blocking him on Tidal was easy.
    2. The Spotify shuffle algorithm is beyond terrible. If you have a 250 song playlist, you’ll hear the same popular 50 songs and never the obscure ones. Sometimes even back-to-back. It’s frustrating and they won’t fix it. It seems to be their algorithm is designed to promote some artists or bands more than others.
    3. Spotify have promised higher quality audio for years and still haven’t brought it out. With good headphones or speakers I can hear the difference that Tidal has.

    I miss how well Spotify integrated with Google Home though.

    • Sequentialsilence@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago
      1. You tap or click on don’t play this on either the the hamburger menu in the app or the right click menu on the computer.
      2. Shuffle doesn’t actually shuffle. It prioritizes songs based on listening habits, and licensing fees. They did a major update in 2022 to address the issues of it playing the same artist back to back, and I noticed a stark improvement, I actually can use shuffle now.
      3. The 320 kbps OGG, or AAC standards that Spotify supports are, outside of critical listening environments, indistinguishable from lossless audio. The only way you are going to hear a difference is with some very high end gear, and a very well trained ear. For reference Tidal themselves don’t stream with lossless audio. They stream with MQA, a very good, near lossless high quality compression algorithm, good enough to be called master quality authenticated, but still compressed, and the version Tidal uses is limited to the 16 bit version not the 24 bit version. Is Tidal Higher quality? Technically. Noticeable? Not without machines and measurement tools.

      For reference I tune studios and PA systems for a living. I know how much peoples ears lie to them. Enjoy what you want to enjoy, because at the end of the day we listen to music for enjoyment. But the only technical win Tidal has is they pay artists more.

      • RalphWolf@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Maybe they’ve since added blocking artists. I know that I had several back and forth conversations with Spotify support on this and there wasn’t any way to do it back then. I don’t want to block a song, I want to block an artist/band completely.

        I don’t want shuffle to take into account their licensing fees, or which record labels they have promotions with. I want a random mix based on my favorite songs or chosen playlist. This is unacceptable and part of why I cancelled Spotify.

        Tidal doesn’t use mqa. The company behind mqa went under and they’ve since changed to FLAC.

        Good headphones or great speakers and I do hear a difference. Not in every song, but in many. Spotify keeps promising better quality and they keep failing to deliver.

        For reference, I have studio monitors that are calibrated and room corrected. Yes. There is a difference.

      • d0ntpan1c@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        I have a 3000+ saved songs list which is my standard “just play some music, give me the kitchen sink” choice. The only way to get Spotify off of a “shuffle-loop” is to turn off shuffle, skip a few songs, then turn shuffle back on.

        It will still inevitably go back to the same 50 songs after a while though. I haven’t found a way to prevent this with any setting. I’ve not noticed it on any of my playlists with only a few hundred songs, but I don’t listen to those as long or often as my saved songs.

        On mobile you can at least pick a (Spotify generated) genre filter which helps.

        I just want Spotify to shuffle like old school iTunes. All the songs on this list… but randomized. A setting like iTunes to favor songs you’ve listened to fewer times would also be neat.

        But we’re in the era of algorithms for everything, and apparently even Spotify premium isn’t enough to save you from sponsored and/or targeted manipulation Or their algorithm is just bugged and they don’t care.

        I’ve actually noticed this with their AI DJ too. Listen to it long enough, it basically favors the same handful of artists and songs over and over again.

  • stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    There is one feature that is missing on all other music streaming apps that makes them useless to me: Spotify Connect

    I remote desktop into another computer for work a lot, so I need a solution for listening to my music on my main computer, while controlling it from another device.

  • Vleeskuil@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I tried Tidal 2 years ago and it was a solid experience, even had better coverage of artists available than spotify when i looked. Tools help with setting over your playlists and such.

    The reason I haven’t gone over to Tidal, is that their shuffle is broken still to this day. If you have a playlist of let’s say 1000 songs, the app will only load the first 500 entries or so until you start scrolling down. Shuffle happens on your end, not on theirs, and since it doesn’t load the songs until you scroll down, shuffling will only take those first 500 into account. It’s absolutely ridiculous that this isn’t being fixed, it support knew about it 1 years ago and still nothing’s changed. That’s unacceptable for such basic behaviour imo.

  • raptir@lemdro.id
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    1 year ago

    I tried Tidal. The interface is decent enough. Audio quality is obviously better if you take advantage of hifi.

    The reason I didn’t stick with it is that I do want the recommendations, and tidal was terrible there. So if you don’t care about that, go for it.

  • N-E-N@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I tried Tidal cause I like the idea of paying artists more per stream. However I simply didn’t like the UI (especially the lack of album covers visible when list-viewing playlists) and recommendations.

    Ended up switching to Apple Music which, even on Android, I prefer.

    Has lossless, supports uploading your own files to the cloud, my fav Library system, and pays artists more per stream than Spotify. No podcasts too 👍 Windows app is also getting pretty good (still behind Spot tho)

  • BlueFairyPainter@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I switched from Yt Music to Tidal because of audio quality and it’s audible. But the difference between Spotify highest quality and Tidal is truly minimal. I did the tests and I couldn’t hear it. I kinda prefer the UI and generally like supporting market alternatives if they’re good and if they pay artists better, then that’s even better. I don’t listen to podcasts either, so those are my personal reasons for choosing Tidal over Spotify.

    I have never really used Spotify, but my partner insists that the recommendations on Tidal are actually better. I also think the recommendations are great, but work best for genres that Tidal is strong at. Of the genres I listen to, I’ve had really good experiences with the genres hip hop, rap, lofi, misc. electronic music, western pop, and less good experiences with classical music, soundtracks and more niche genres like J-Pop, African Pop and random trash (on Spotify, our we used to like to prank our friends by adding stuff like gangster’s paradise kids bop version or “female orgasm sounds” to their playlists. I haven’t really found prank-worthy stuff on Tidal yet).

    So it’s really a personal decision and tbh, I think Spotify is the better choice for most people.

  • BakedGoods@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Switched to Tidal a couple of years ago. I like the app better and the bump in audio quality is nice with good headphones or on my hifi system. If you’re the kind of person who walk around with whatever the latest chinesium special bluetooth buds promoted by influencers are then it might not be for you.

    They’ve pretty much copied all the good features on Spotify (like my mix) but left out all the useless bloat and “promotions”.

    • Jure Repinc@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Couldn’t agree more with this. It was a well worth switch for me too. They had some moment of bullshiting with closed MQA audio format abut have now come to senses and are getting rid of this nonsense and switching to open FLAC for lossless audio also for highest quality.

    • newIdentity@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Just a quick note: Tidal isn’t lossless. They said they were, but that was a lie and they removed that statement and said they never said they were when they were caught.

      There is a lot more to it so if you have time, watch this video: https://youtu.be/pRjsu9-Vznc

  • Vub@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have Spotify, Tidal and YouTube Music. In my opinion Spotify’s apps and UI is way better. Also the recommendations are much better.

    Desktop Tidal feels clunky and YT Music doesn’t have a desktop client at all.

    All three mobile apps are just fine.

    Many more people use Spotify so you’re probably more likely to find good playlist links for Spotify.

    YouTube Music is included with YouTube Premium and Tidal has higher quality audio if you need that.

    If you don’t care so much about the UI, recommendation engines etc, you can use any of them really. They have similar libraries and in the end they do the same thing - play music.

  • Zectivi@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I use Tidal. I have no issues with the app or anything it recommends to me. In fact, it does a really great job at mentioning new music from bands that I haven’t heard from in a while. Econoline Crush and Filter are 2 that had a recent release that even Apple Music didn’t tell me about, even though I have both bands music in my library with Apple.

    I’ve tried to like Spotify, but I just couldn’t get into it. There was just a feeling that it’s not a music first app, but a user data collection app that happens to provide music. I don’t get that feeling with Tidal.

    If I had to complain about Tidal for something, it would be the Live feature. I have the toggle off for showing live sessions, but I’d love to just turn it completely off and remove all traces of that feature. No one cares what I’m listening to, and I have no intention of being “social” in my music app.

  • TheFloydist@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    iBroadcast. Upload music you have purchased, access it from everywhere. No ads. Not great for discovering new music but it’s an underrated service.

  • notfromhere@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I turned off the streaming services and went back to mp3s. Jellyfin has Finamp and there’s also VLC and others I’m sure.