Releasing music on Spotify? Join here (100% perpetually free with no strings attached): <a href="https://brew.fm" rel="nofollow">https://brew.fm</a><p>I'm a software engineer and work at a HR startup in NYC. I started in music, first playing keys in a band in Europe, then building soft synths, which got me in touch with Korg, who got me in touch with Red Bull, who turned me into a game developer, and before I knew it I was a software engineer living in the US. Not sure how all of that happened, but the truth is, I miss working with artists.<p>Brew.fm is an attempt to help others turn their dreams into reality where I couldn't: make a living from music.<p>I started with a collaboration market place, after interviewing dozens of artists, and realizing some of them had a huge leg up compared to others, because of an early collab with an established artist.<p>It's pretty straight forward: you log in with Spotify, verify your artist account, and Brew.fm automatically imports all your tracks and turns them into collab requests. It will detect future releases as well, so no manual labor from your side needed other than those 2 steps. People can reach out through private chat after which you decide to share personal info (eg email) and arrange the collab.<p>So far 79 people signed up, very open to feedback.
Also, I got carried away and created this interactive 3d graph tool that lets you discover similar tracks based on Spotify listening behavior: <a href="https://www.brew.fm/track/5jRaNtkJrlg2Xh7PuMhcif/Get-Down---Camel-Power-Club-Edit" rel="nofollow">https://www.brew.fm/track/5jRaNtkJrlg2Xh7PuMhcif/Get-Down---...</a>. Inspired by good friend @drpancake's rephonic.com graph tool to discover podcasts. Might be interesting for non-artists as well, to find new tracks.
So I'm not entirely sure what I'm supposed to be doing here? Do I have to contact other artists to ask them if I can remix their track? <i>confused</i>
Weird bug (I think?): the progress bar when playing a song (#seek-slider) goes back and forth every second or so, instead of going only in one direction (FF 96.0.1).