I recently set up Sonarr and Radarr on my home server and I’m loving it.

However, I don’t get why you would ever use Lidarr. Why would you ever download music using torrents? You can use tools like spotdl and yt-dlp to download songs from YouTube music and Spotify, it’s faster and more reliable; I have had some issues finding torrents of music from less-known artists.

To me it seems like it would be much better to have a tool like Lidarr or have support in Jellyseerr to download music from common streaming services.

What are your views on this?

  • Eryck Gutteral@lemmy.studio
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    1 month ago
    • quality
    • organization of files
    • proper metadata
    • extras like photos/other images, lyrics, links, etc
    • community (on various torrent sites, mainly)
    • not being reliant on a company and centralized servers
    • someone paid for the album… band made more from that one sale than how many streams of it? Lol 😐
    • commands are crowding my CLI history. Lol

    It depends what it is and maybe I’m not savvy enough but, I find it easier to use bittorrent still.

    Some things are easier to find on YT or X streaming service so, I’d say multiple methods these days are necessary depending on what one is into.

    To that end, I think we need to just reach out to bands and point them to a primer on uploading their music. Additionally, more people need to go to shows and start creating high quality torrents of smaller, more independant bands. As well as people creating torrents or torrent packs for the stuff that gets ripped from the other sources.

  • plumbercraic@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    if the music is older, and not from the US, it’s often not on spotify. Versions matter too - even for some mainstream bands their B sides/acoustic/live versions just aren’t on spotify or youtube. Album metadata for spotify is garbage too - it just isn’t an adequate replacement for a record collection.

    I do use a spotify subscription, but for me it’s a tool for playlist generation and music discovery.

    Also audio quality, as others have mentioned.

  • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    Downloading from YouTube or Spotify is still piracy. And those sources offer mostly shit quality far removed from the artist’s intent.

    Believe it of not, there are things that aren’t on Spotify, YouTube, TIDAL, Apple Music, Bandcamp, or any streaming service. Sometimes when a streaming service does have a song or album, it’s either not the best quality or only a radio censored version available, even if Spotify claims it’s the explicit version. And that explicit tag feels like a slander because the original intent should be default and the radio edits should be the one’s with the CENSORED tag.

    There is great music out there you can’t purchase or stream a digital release of.

    There are old and often played CDs in my collection that can’t be ripped properly (by me) for one reason or another.

    There are some really high quality vinyl recordings out there, done by people with better hardware and more skill than I. Again, many of these vinyl releases are not available in any other format and are no longer available for purchase anywhere.

    The real primary reason I got into it, in the long ago times of Napster, was that I liked to make mixtapes/discs. When radio was no longer playing songs I wanted on those tapes, the wilds of Internet was the answer.

    I still regularly support the artists I like as directly as I can: buying albums and merch directly from them at shows or their own websites. And I spend more of that money on more artists and especially less popular artists specifically because of the habits listed above.

  • cheddar@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    Because some music is not available on streaming platforms. Occasionally artists and labels decide to split their ways, and suddenly their older albums are gone. Over the years I started losing notable chunks of music I like from my playlists.

    • HouseWolf@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Not only that but the original mixes of albums often don’t get put on streaming platforms because of licensing bullshit or whatever.

      And especially for rock and metal the newer remasters of popular albums tend to be pretty bad and overly compressed or have weird post EQ added.

    • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 month ago

      Similar here, but I don’t do google and I hate Spotify lawl. I do download for my collection, but I’ve also subscribed to Apple Music because I don’t wanna fuck around with putting music on my phone, I mostly use my phone for podcasts.

      But I just for some headphones that use spatial sound and holy shit is that fantastic. I have like five nice pairs of open-back fancy headphones and now I’m using my probudz all the time because it makes your music sound 4.5D and you can look around if you want and it sounds like you’re at a concert

  • Proteus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 month ago

    Basically boils down to quality. The default options for pirated music are FLAC 44.1-96 kHz 16-24 bit, or MP3 320kbps.

    Both are better than YouTube quality.

  • Jolteon@lemmy.zip
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    1 month ago

    Because I have a hoarding problem, and channeling it towards data hoarding prevents me from having all the conventional problems that come with hoarding.

  • HurkieDrubman@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    but to answer your question, I’ve heard audiophiles complain about the highest possible quality you can get from a YouTube rip. so, I’m assuming that some of the torrents out there are higher quality than what you can get from youtube

    • RinseDrizzle@midwest.social
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      1 month ago

      Pretty much this. I like to DJ, mostly a hobbyist over paying gigs these days, and have plenty of tunes ripped from the tube. Now I have the fun task of trying to replace everything with higher quality versions. Shitty rips are fine enough for a house party on a humble audio system, but proper venues with subs and high fidelity audio setup make it obvious you ripped from YouTube.

      In a perfect world I would love to buy what I use. Problem is I would need an insane budget to grab what I want. I listen to a lot of a music.

  • voxel@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    if you’re an audiophile you can get flacs and stuff (but tbh I’d rather store my music in opus, flac just seems like a waste of space)

  • letsgo@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Because back when the only way to listen to new music was to buy it, then find out a load of it was absolute tripe, then not be able to take it back.

    So fuck 'em. I download first, then if I like it I buy it. There’s quite a few CDs on my shelf that I first pirated. And no CDs that are full of lame filler shite.

  • Tregetour@lemdro.id
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    29 days ago

    My card issuer shouldn’t get to help itself to the profiling data, and the service shouldn’t get to lose my info in the data breach.