I've been using Spotify's "Liked Songs" feature for a little while now, and recently changed my approach. For a while I was cherry-picking individual songs, and got up to ~700 or so. But I was getting impatient with that, and I was still hearing a lot of the same songs over and over, within the span of a few days or a week. So a week ago, I just started shoveling entire albums onto the list (there's a "like all songs" button with each album) and now it's up to ~2,400 songs. Okay, that's more like it.
But that approach seems to be creating its own problems. Spotify doesn't let you navigate your Liked Songs very easily. For starters, it's just one, loooong list. You can alphabetize it by artist, but you can't skip down to a particular letter. You can't even flip it around and reverse-alphabetize it. So if I want a Velvet Underground song or a Zero 7 song, I have to either scroll down through all ~2,400 songs or just [forget] the list altogether and go to the artist's or album's page. When I'm listening to music, sometimes I say "dealer's choice; hit me" but sometimes I like to put particular songs onto my queue, as a kind of on-the-fly playlist. Scrolling through 2,400 songs for that is a PITA. A while back, they introduced buttons that could sort your Liked Songs by different tags, some by mood ("dark") or by genre ("classic rock") but that feature has never worked properly.
I remember trying Pandora when it launched in '05. It seemed like just the sort of thing I'd been looking for, basically my whole life. I remember thinking it was a cool idea that still needed a lot of work and I'd come back someday. I guess these apps are still works in progress.
Anyway. In the interest of posting some music in the music thread, I'll ask Spotify to play something random from my list and see what it gives us.
"A Heart of Glass (Remastered)" by This Mortal Coil, from Filigree & Shadow (1986). Not one of the TMC songs I would've picked - this wasn't one of the songs I had on the list when I was selecting songs, one by one - but I guess that's part of the point of an app like this, eh?