Above & Beyond's Group Therapy Radio is one of my favorites <a href="http://www.aboveandbeyond.nu/abgt" rel="nofollow">http://www.aboveandbeyond.nu/abgt</a>
Created a collab spotify playlist to track these, in case OP didn't. I'll hold off on adding more, just to see if it's something people would be interested in.<p><a href="https://open.spotify.com/user/1216464111/playlist/7L1nBwgeDSot0M8f942SP7" rel="nofollow">https://open.spotify.com/user/1216464111/playlist/7L1nBwgeDS...</a><p>I'll go ahead and add that this playlist should diverge from OP's, since a collaborative coding playlist would ideally be free of vocals.
I'm embarrassed to admit this, but I got into white noise playlists on Spotify and came across some womb noise tracks. They're oddly soothing.
My staples:<p>- C148<p>- Deadmau5<p>- Cave Story<p>- Crypt of the Necrodancer<p>- Undertale<p>- A large number of the OC Remix arranged albums.<p>- Zelda<p>- A playlist of music that I've heard performed at Stanford's Memorial Church or Bing Concert Hall.<p>In all of the above cases, I filter out virtually all of the tracks which have vocals. Unfortunately, that means my favorite band (They Might Be Giants) aren't on the list.
a while back in another thread one of the guys involved with brain.fm gave a discount to HN, I gave it a go, it's pretty good ( no idea whether the theory behind it all works or not, but it's good zoning music for coding)<p>I have a massive list I've built up over time of electronica/trance/rave type music I use for coding on spotify. If you look for coding music on spotify there's a number of lists that are similar.