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@Gargron Setup a Navidrome server and then buy FLAC files from Qobuz. You’ll be happier and feel more connected with your music library.
@Gargron Ich nutze das seit knapp einem Jahr. Die Qualität ist teilweise atemberaubend, insofern man nicht bluetooth-bottleneck betreibt. Benchmark-Album dafür ist bei mir "Earth tones" von den "Bahamas". Einfach mal probieren, wärmste Empfehlung.
let me know how it goes, I'm thinking of doing the same
@Gargron just switched from deezer to Qobuz as well and so far I really like it. It's not so bloated and I really enjoy the possibility to buy albums. Also they pay the most to artists among streaming services
@sturmsucht
What makes Qobuz better compared to Deezer?
I am asking because I had already a trial month one Qobuz and was missing some Metal compared to Tidal.
Qobuz plus points for me were:
- the reduced non-poppy UI
- the higher payment to artists
- the possibility to buy albums I enjoy
For the catalogue: I'm fine with mine, but since also albums I enjoyed on other platforms disappeared on those, I'm more into owning my favourite music again.
I also had some unsatisfied support conversation during my trial with deezer and never felt home there.
Graph by musician https://www.instagram.com/patriciana
@Gargron Have been trying it out for a few days now and like it so far. I have come across a couple of songs they didn't have in their library that were available on YouTube Music, but I can live with that. The better sound quality is completely lost on me, but I like it for being European and not Spotify.
@Gargron nice decision. Get a DAC (I recommend IFI) and let the highest resolution shine. 👍
@Gargron Where are the lyrics?
@Gargron American here. I've been buying any music not available via Bandcamp from Qobuz for about a year and a half now, and I have no complaints.
I've had Apple Music as part of an Apple One subscription until now, but I've canceled that and I'm about to test out a Qobuz subscription for streaming new music to see if I want to buy it.
I also want to reduce my dependence on American tech companies, including Apple. They've largely been negative forces for the last decade.
@Gargron use with Roon if you can, I believe they have a free trial
@slatey Could you elaborate?
@Gargron @slatey Roon is largely for audio geeks https://roon.app/ It'll act as your UI, unifying multiple audio services, & supposedly has a very good music discovery algorithm. But, it's another subscription.
One thing about Qobuz I've experienced in the year since I migrated from Spotify, is while it's not algorithmic, it is run by music geeks, so you need to move back to a more intentional method of finding new music. That means simply listening to albums they recommend or showcase.
@Gargron I just signed up for a family Qobuz trial on Friday. Liking it so far. The UI isn't the greatest but I like the increased depth/fidelity in their audio (and I'm not even an audiophile).
@Gargron I've been liking qobuz
@Gargron one nice perk of Qobuz over Tidal… they’ll *sell* you the music. High res FLACs.
@Gargron I've been using qobuz for over a year now. It works well for me and does what I want it to do. I didn't even know they're non-us. Now I'm definitely keeping them!
@Gargron I've been getting my FLAC files from Qobuz for years now. Like them a lot!
@Gargron@mastodon.social why is it such an issue that it's a US company? Yeah, the Reich is on their bullshit but Tidal seems like a good company from what I've seen, with much better contracts for artists than Spotify.
@julia @Gargron Tidal is owned by Jack Dorsey via Block Inc. Jack Dorsey is just another supporter of the maniacs in the Trump administration, he endorsed Robert F. Kennedy. He had a tech bromance with Elon Musk, culminating in Musk's purchase of Twitter and followed by Dorsey's support of Musk's 'leadership' there.
Supporting any US corporation means you're going to be supporting the extremist authoritarian oligarchs there. They're all intertwined.
@julia I agree Tidal is a nice app and much better than Spotify. I just don't think it's wise for Europeans to rely on US infrastructure in the medium to long term. The sooner and more services we can replace, the better.