The Echo Nest is a music intelligence and data platform[clarification needed] for developers and media companies. Owned by Spotify since 2014,[4] the company is based in Somerville, MA. The Echo Nest began as a research spin-off from the MIT Media Lab to understand the audio and textual content of recorded music.[5] Its creators intended it to perform music identification, recommendation, playlist creation, audio fingerprinting, and analysis for consumers and developers.[6]

The Echo Nest Ltd.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryMusic
FounderTristan Jehan[1]
Brian Whitman[2]
Headquarters,
Key people
Tristan Jehan
(co-Founder & CTO)
Brian Whitman
(co-Founder & CTO)
Jim Lucchese
(CEO)[3]
ProductsMusic intelligence platform
ParentSpotify
Websitethe.echonest.com

History

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The Echo Nest was founded in 2005 from the dissertation work of Tristan Jehan[1] and Brian Whitman[2] at the MIT Media Lab.

In October 2010, The Echo Nest received a $7 million venture financing from Matrix Partners and Commonwealth Capital Ventures.[6][7]

In March 2014, The Echo Nest was acquired by Spotify for 49.7 million euro, consisting of cash and Spotify's equity.[8]

Products

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The Echo Nest's product line was based on their automatically derived database of data about 30 million songs[5] aggregated from web crawling, data mining, and digital signal processing techniques. The company also made its data available to developers via an API used by over 7,000 developers[3][non-primary source needed] to build independent music applications. The API was shut down on 31 May 2016, and developers were encouraged to use the Spotify API instead.[9]

The Echo Nest released data on 1 million songs for research purposes.[10] The company was a co-organizer of Music Hack Day.[11]

In June 2011, the company released Echoprint, an open source and open data acoustic fingerprinting library.[12]

Clients

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The data powered music solutions for customers such as MTV,[13] Island Def Jam,[14] BBC,[15] MOG, Warner Music Group, eMusic,[16] Spotify, Rdio, Clear Channel, VEVO, Nokia, SiriusXM[17] and Thumbplay.[3]

Spotify

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The Echo Nest was acquired on 6 March 2014, by music streaming service Spotify. The music intelligence agency functions to help Spotify curate personalized music recommendations that are driven by algorithms. The Echo Nest is the driving force behind the playlists professionally curated on Spotify. To generate individualized Discover Weekly playlists as well as recommend suggestions in the 'Discover' section of Spotify's home page, individualized for every subscriber, the Echo Nest collects data on a user's listening habits and uses it to predict what music they will enjoy the most.[18]

The Echo Nest has created Taste Profiles based on the listening patterns they notice about a user. Taste Profiles are an amalgamation of taste clusters of genres and subgenres. Taste Profiles and clusters are not publicly available for individual users to access but have been released to journalists and researchers.[19]

One Echo Nest employee has created a categorical perception spectrum of genres and subgenres based on "an algorithmically-generated, readability-adjusted scatter-plot of the musical genre-space, based on data tracked and analyzed for 4,341 genre-shaped distinctions by Spotify" called Every Noise at Once.[20]

The Echo Nest has created an internal tool for Spotify and Echo Nest employees called The Truffle Pig, which is used in Spotify to curate mood and occasion specific playlists. The Truffle Pig is a sonically advanced search engine that can be asked to search for songs based on adjectives or feelings. The search can also be redacted for particular qualities to produce higher levels of specificity. Playlists curated by Spotify are available for public access. They are created in part by the algorithms associated with The Truffle Pig and in part by the music experts employed by Spotify. To create these playlists, one of Spotify's thirty-two resident music experts will use the Truffle Pig search engine to find songs associated with a quality or theme. From the search results, the employee can hand pick songs perfect for any playlist. These playlists include "Your Favorite Coffeehouse" and "TGIF".[21]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Tristan Jehan. "Tristan Jehan". MIT Media Lab.
  2. ^ a b Brian Whitman. "Brian Whitman". MIT Media Lab.
  3. ^ a b c The Echo Nest. "About Us - The Company".
  4. ^ Spotify (6 March 2014). "Spotify Acquires The Echo Nest". Spotify.
  5. ^ a b David Zax (4 March 2011). "The Echo Nest Makes Pandora Look Like a Transistor Radio". Fast Company.
  6. ^ a b The Boston Globe (5 October 2010). "The Echo Nest secures $7m in financing". The Boston Globe.
  7. ^ Leena Rao (5 October 2010). "The Echo Nest Raises $7 Million For Music Personalization Platform". TechCrunch.
  8. ^ Tim Ingham (10 May 2015). "Turns Out Spotify Acquired The Echo Nest For Just €50M". Music Business Worldwide.
  9. ^ Important API Announcement, March 29th 2016
  10. ^ Matthew Lasar (8 March 2011). "Million-song dataset: take it, it's free". Ars Technica.
  11. ^ Anthony Bruno (1 April 2011). "Q&A: The Echo Nest CEO Jim Lucchese". Billboard. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
  12. ^ Stuart Dredge (23 June 2011). "Make your own Shazam? There's an API for that called Echoprint". The Guardian. London.
  13. ^ Sam Gustin (14 December 2010). "MTV Unveils New Music Discovery Website". Wired.
  14. ^ Brenna Ehrlich (2 February 2011). "Island Def Jam Partners with the Echo Nest To Create Opportunities For Developers". Mashable.
  15. ^ Mini Swamy (28 December 2010). "Echo Nest Enables BBC to Deliver Unique Musical Content". TMCnet.
  16. ^ Paul Sawers (30 August 2011). "eMusic to Launch Echo Nest Powered Smart Music Discovery Apps". The Next Web.
  17. ^ "The Echo Nest Teams with SiriusXM for MySXM".
  18. ^ Walt Hickey (16 September 2014). "Spotify Knows Me Better Than I Know Myself". FiveThirtyEight.
  19. ^ Alex Heath (3 September 2015). "Spotify is getting unbelievably good at picking music – here's an inside look at how". Business Insider.
  20. ^ "Every Noise at Once". everynoise.com.
  21. ^ David Pierce (28 July 2015). "Inside Spotify's Hunt for the Perfect Playlist". Wired.
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