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Mix tunes for power coding sessions (soundcloud.com)
81 points by jv2222 on June 22, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 57 comments


You can also use Mugasha, I have been working on this for the last 9 months. http://mugasha.com/ use FB connect or hackersftw as invite


I prefer bands such as Talkdemonic and This Will Destroy You.

http://www.myspace.com/talkdemonicmusicmaking

http://www.myspace.com/thiswilldestroyyou


Totally agree with This Will Destroy You and Explosions in The Sky as solid coding music.

I'd also add Mogwai to that list.


TWDY just got added to my "work time" playlist. Sound similar to another one of my go to bands, Explosions In The Sky: http://www.myspace.com/explosionsinthesky


Another good place to get good electronic coding music is http://www.di.fm They have a bunch of different radio channels and very few commercials.


This is better http://mugasha.com/ [they are our competitor :)]


Yes, but even one commercial will completely break your flow.


I recommend Squarepusher.


Analord!


Just discovered analord a few months ago. Love love love it.

http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/3573820/AFX_(Aphex_Twin)_-_A...

(it's a vinyl release people, so unless you have a turntable this is the only way to get a copy)


I'm sure you meant...

"Make sure you buy the vinyl first, then download a digital copy"


Or, he could mean, "Because they are refusing to publish in a format that most of their audience can easily play, get it here so you can actually listen to it."

For instance, I have nothing that can play vinyl. I can't even detect a difference between 128/256 bitrate MP3s due to ear infections I had as a kid, so vinyl is pointless to me.

If the album was up on Beatport/iTunes/Amazon, I'd buy it after I listened to it. It's very frustrating to hear something fantastic on Pandora, and upon attempting to buy the damn thing finding out that it's only in vinyl or not available digitally anywhere.

I've got almost a thousand dollars in iTunes/Beatport purchases. I really wish more publishers and artists would make it user friendly for me to give them my money.


Absolutely, I agree with you. I suppose I was coming from the 'support the artists' side of things. The majority of music that I listen to is made by artists that probably struggle to make ends meat just making music. This isnt because they are bad at it, its because the music they make isnt main stream and isnt marketed that well. They do it purely because they get a kick from it.

I just think its important to support these people. I always buy the music I like. If I dont like it, its not worth my money and it gets deleted.


Another two sources:

DJ Bolivia has programming-inspired mixes at http://www.djbolivia.ca/bolivia.html

And, I can't recommend the Podrunner podcast enough. If you can, throw a few bucks his way as it's almost entirely listener supported. They're made for runners of course but work excellently for coding.


Here is my site. There are 6 mixes i did earlier this year. I use them for running to.

http://chunkyslink.com


do all coders listen to techno? I find myself much more efficient when listening to jazz.


Yes, all coders everywhere listen to techno, no exceptions.

[Edit: it's a little known fact that, in addition to starting the FSF and the GNU project, Richard Stallman was the first to sample the Amen Break.]


For anyone who doesn't get the Amen Break reference: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SaFTm2bcac


Pretty much the only band I listen to while programming is Apocalyptica. I just like the driving-ness of their songs. For those who don't know, they're a cello metal band. Wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocalyptica


Whoa. Listening to the first thing I found on YouTube. They sound awesome.


I mostly listen to hard rock, or grunge. And sometimes Marilyn Manson.


If I'm trying to learn new concepts, classical is good--or no music at all. When I'm coding (and the most I'll have to do is look into documentation), I listen to techno and electronic stuff. A lot of stuff I do is iterative (especially when I'm doing design work), so the music keeps me creative.


I despise techno when coding it's often irregular, sometimes too loud – trance is so much more regular and works a lot better as background music. Alternatively, minimal/post-rock (Stars of the Lid, Explosions In The Sky) is regular, non-disturbing and generally nice.


I think he was using "techno" as an umbrella term for electronic music. Lets be honest -- techno, trance, electro, progressive etc. it's all ultimately pretty much the same thing.


> Lets be honest -- techno, trance, electro, progressive etc. it's all ultimately pretty much the same thing.

Electro sounds nothing like trance, even if you know little about electronic music. Compare Kraftwerk with Tiesto or ATB for example to see what I mean. You may need to listen to trance for a while to be able to distinguish between, say, Goa and Psychedelic, but saying that all genres of electronic music are ultimately the same thing comes across as ignorant. (I understand that any electronic music sounds like noise to some people, but it's a genre as rich and diverse as any other.)


Here's a nice electronic music guide with loots of samples for anyone interested in hearing the differences between the many sub genres.

http://techno.org/electronic-music-guide/


I disagree completely. Those styles you mention are all completely different. You can still split these down further and still be able to tell the difference.

e.g. tech-house, progressive-trance, progressive-house, hard-house etc etc.

The list goes on.


Seconded on the prog rock. A recommendation also goes out for godspeed you!\? black!\? emperor!\?

(escapes represent the regex-uncertainty of where they put that damn exclamation point)


>> do all coders listen to techno?

I'm sorry to tell you this is trance not techno.

If this (trance) is a little cheesy for your tastes you could try something a little more grown up and housey. Still with a decent pace (125bpm) but with more of a groove.

http://chunkyslink.com

"Playing with complex patterns of synthesised layers and intellegent beats" is how I describe it to my dad who would also think that this (the link above) is techno.

I can also highly recommend this site http://www.residentadvisor.net/podcast.aspx that has a new podcast each week - all electronic music. But definatly no cheesy trance there either.


Can you recommend a link where we can learn to differentiate the various eletronic music styles ?



This guide is more into the history of the styles than how to differentiate one style from the other.


It has audio samples for each style.


http://di.fm

I prefer Euro myself


I don't listen to anything because I think that music is something much more important than background noise.


Your statement seems to imply a couple of different things. Perhaps I have misjudged what you meant, and if I have please correct me. However, for the sake of discussion, here are the things your statement seem to imply to me:

1) the fact that you are playing something in the background suggests that you don't feel it it important.

2) Having something playing in the background, where full and undivided attention is not being given to it can have no positive influence on a person.

I don't agree with either of those things. In fact, I would say that in many cases the opposite of both is most certainly true.

As to the first, what a person has playing in the background at work or at home often very rightly defines the character of the person, and gives you great insight into what they believe, and what they hold dear.

Regarding the second, I believe there is ample evidence to show that non-primary stimuli (call it subliminal, if you wish) can have a profound effect on the minds of people (either for good or for evil).

I would be very interested to here your view on this, as well as the view of others on HN.


That's funny, I listen to music because I don't like background noise. (In fact, listening to music you're familiar with can help you focus since it shuts out other, irregular, distracting sounds.)


It depends. I might listen to ambient or trance when I'm working because it's designed to fit in the background, or I'm not interested in listening to it as music. But when I'm not working I listen to a lot more prog rock or metal. Or prog metal.


Mmh, I don't. I'm not really into it, so if I really need music while coding (it happens, although it's not the standard for me) I go for classic rock or something like that. Nothing too 'extreme' but at the same time something that I enjoy, just to take some weight off my brain. Oh, and also Meshuggah, although they don't fit in the description I just gave :)


+1 on the jazz! Miles Davis is my favorite to listen to while coding.


hip-hop


How about some truly free music? Mixsets are a grey area.

Give http://www.professorkliq.com/ a try (if you don't like IDM just like me, don't worry about the "kliq"). http://www.jamendo.com/en/artist/Professor_Kliq


These are really good, thanks for posting. I generally listen to LTJ Bukem during long sessions, so this will fit right in.


I absolutely have to listen to music when doing pretty much anything. I usually start with something jazzy or even classical (ever listened to gregorian chants? awesome) then move on to progrock (or what else should Mars Volta be called) and I end up either at minimalism or some techno. Silence is distracting!


Nice list, listened to it while coding tonight and it works pretty well. This is my first time really using music while coding, and I'm pretty satisfied. Only learning new concepts requires me to turn it off, anything iterative it works great to drown everything else out.


Thanks for the link. These are great mixes. I signed up for a cloudsound account. :-)

I find that words distract me - I want to sing! - so techno/trance/dance/whatever is great for me to code by because it's mostly repeated rhythm.


Great mixes, thanks - I can recommend the Gareth Emery podcast if you don't mind a bit of talking: http://www.garethemerypodcast.com/


I'll chime in. What gets me in the zone is a combination of: power noise, electro and classical/romantic arrangements.


For power thinking sessions, plug 'Edith Piaf' into Pandora and rejoice.


If you're into metal at all, Tristania is a great band to program to.


Daft Punk gets me going


Death From Above 1979 works for me...


The discordance in some DFA will instantly distract me.


Player doesn't work on linux.


Spotify :)


I've never been able to find anything on there. They seem to have lots of commercial music but not much for my tastes.


Limbik Frequencies is another great source for coding music (slightly more leftfield) http://limbikfreq.com/




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