I
was just a naive 15 year old in the year 1998, and my older cousin
introduced me to the best invention in computers after the Internet, the
MP3. It was an instant love, my goal was
to use all my PC storage (10GBs) and fill it with music. I was ready to
start, I got my first MP3s from my cousin: Nena 99 – Luftballoons,
Depeche Mode - Just can’t get enough , and Boston - More than a feeling
and a few others. An eclectic collection of music I know, but it was
just the beginning.
To play my music I had to install an MP3 player, and I installed Winamp my all time favorite player.
Winamp was so cool, it had the slickest interface and it was the first media player that let you create playlists.
There were 3 ways to get mp3s
back then, ripping your cds to mp3, copying mp3s from your friends, or
downloading them from the Internet. Of course the first option was the
easiest one, I converted all my CD library to mp3s, that’s how I got my
first 1000 songs. But this method was not sustainable, it took a lot of
time to rip the cds, and I didn’t have enough money to keep up with the
latest hits from my favorite artists. So I had to go to my good friend
the Internet to stay on top of the trends. There were few options back
then to get music from the Internet, a couple of sites with files in
their root directory. My weapon of choice, The Music Lover a site that
no longer exist that had the Billboard Top 40 Hits updated every week.
Not the best source for indie music, but it had all the MTV hits. It was
good enough for me. That’s how I added a couple of 1000 new songs to my
music library.
After
some months a friend introduce me to Napster the first peer to peer
file sharing app. Sean Parker and Shawn Fanning revolutionized the world
19 years ago with this service. Although the focus was music it gave
birth to other P2P technologies that are booming today like the
Blockchain and Bitcoin. Napster was amazing, sadly it only lasted for of
couple years due to copyright infrigment. Some other services came up
to the rescue (Limewire, eMule, Gnutella) but none of them were as good
as Napster.
“Sean Parker: Well, I founded an internet company that let folks download and share music for free.
Amelia Ritter: Kind of like Napster?
Sean Parker: Exactly like Napster.
Amelia Ritter: What do you mean?
Sean Parker: I founded Napster.
Amelia Ritter: Sean Parker founded Napster.”
Amelia Ritter: Kind of like Napster?
Sean Parker: Exactly like Napster.
Amelia Ritter: What do you mean?
Sean Parker: I founded Napster.
Amelia Ritter: Sean Parker founded Napster.”
About 2 years later one of the last geniuses in human history, Steve Jobs, made paying for music cool 😎
again with the launch of the iTunes store. With iTunes my library kept
growing, it had almost every song in the planet. Every song on iTunes
had the best song compression settings, and was the best app for
organizing music. iTunes quickly became the most popular MP3 player, it
had a clean UI that was simple and elegant, obviously you can’t expect
less from a product from Apple.
I
had everything under control with iTunes, my library of more that 30k
songs was in sync with all my devices, I had playlists for every genre,
audience and mood. I was on top of my game until Spotify came knocking
my door. Spotify was a game changer my library grew 100X, now I could
stream every song in the world and the best part I didn’t run out of
storage.
I
have more than 200 playlists on Spotify. I have the app on my Mac, my
smartphone, my car, my tv and now on my homespeaker. I discover about
100 new songs every week.
Music
is the answer, it has give meaning to my live. Thank you MP3 for
creating this revolution. Can’t wait to see what the future will bring
us.
PS. A few other services that have being part of this history:
Shazam, YouTube, Vevo, Soundcloud, Musical.ly, Beats. Thank you!
Source: https://medium.com/@juanestebancorrea/the-music-revolution-thanks-mp3-aa739b370190
Source: https://medium.com/@juanestebancorrea/the-music-revolution-thanks-mp3-aa739b370190