For coming in to a new venue to get a feel for the space, when you set up your mobile rig, or wherever else. Also, what what made you choose this/these songs? If I were to choose a song or two or three for this purpose, what qualities should they have?

Here, I used the pygame.mixer.music.get_busy() function to check whether the song has finished, but the problem is that the check_if_finished() function is not giving me the expected output when I pause the song. What I want is to not print "The song is finished" when I pause the song.


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Make sure that all of your devices have Sync Library turned on and signed in with the same Apple ID that you use with Apple Music. If your music library is stored on your computer, check the cloud status of songs to find missing music and resolve issues.

I am trying to create a MP3-player with Tkinter and PyGame(it's music module). I have written a method to check if the song has finished playing, but the problem is that the programe itself gets cycled in it and I don't know how to implement it differently. Is there any other way to do this?

While it is playing, click either the iTunes or Music menu (whichever you have) at the very top left of your computer. Then click Preferences and look for the General tab. There you can check "Show -- songs list checkboxes." See below.

You should check this setting called "Show unplayable songs" this will show all songs available on Spotify when you search and if a particular song is not available in your country, it will show up in the search results but will be grayed out, meaning it isn't available to you.

This link you shared -availability/#0YYTzsfHOk9YT7uBCg9acR I tested it on music for a band and it isn't accurate - do you know where they get the data from on what countries a song is available in? Do they only see main label information eg/ Universal etc as I can see two of this band's labels where 100% the songs are available in countries yet this says it's not. Would love to know how they get the data and where so as to know how accurate this is.

While doing housework, I was grooving on a great song from Alison Krauss that I hadn't heard in a while (probably because I hadn't played that station in a while) and noticed I hadn't thumbed it up yet. About that time I lost my wi-fi and Pandora switched to one of my offline stations. I rushed back to my wi-fi reception area, frantically switched back to the original channel and, of course, Pandora starts playing another song and has lost my recent history for that station.

i'd love to be able to see the list of songs i listened to last saturday, so i could go try to find the tabs or chords. i discover so much new music using pandora - NOT having this feature may encourage me to quit paying for it and move to a service that does have an easy-to-use history feature.

Storing a JSON list of artist : song takes a lot of memory? If yo you're doing it wayyyyyyy wrong. That's a ridiculous excuse considering how cheap storage is and how little data actually needs to be stored.

Not buying this. Scrolling through your recently played music used to be a thing. Granted I've been using pandora for give or take over a decade but it definitely was a thing at some point. For what ever right, wrong or indifferent reason it's not anymore. This is supposed to be a music discovery platform. How are we supposed to discover music if I can't go back and see what songs have played over time. It's not realistic to have to run to the device to thumbs up the song for every new one I hear. You have my vote to bring this feature back.

Today I logged into my Pandora Account for the 1st time in years.I remember that I was in love with many songs that I used to listen to on Pandora years ago. But I don't remember the names of many of them nor the radio station they were on. For example, I remember one of the songs had the word "April" in the title but I don't remember what station it was on, nor the artist's name. Is there any way to see all of the songs that rotate on each station, or a history of the songs I listened to going back years, or do I have to listen to all my stations 1 by 1 until I hopefully find the song? Thanks for anyone who replies.

See this screenshot - this is the second song that has played so far in this listening session - behind this track you can partially see the album artwork of the track that played before this one did.

"Check It Out" is a 1987 song by John Mellencamp released as the third single from his album The Lonesome Jubilee in 1988. The single was a top 20 hit, reaching number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100.[1][2]

According to Mellencamp biographer David Masciotra, the song "describes the rewards and punishments of a typical American middle-class family" and professes that "our attempts to solve the mysteries of the heart and grasp the truth of humanity are fraught with disaster and disappointment."[3] Mellencamp biographer Paul Rees called its sound "uplifting".[4]

Cash Box said that Mellencamp's rough county-ish feel takes you into the heartland [of America]" and that the song "features a nice instrumental hook line that sounds like an otherworldly bagpipe and leads into the verses."[5]

Are moving at a million miles a day,


Alas, our first major error. All the stars visible to the naked eye are indeed within the Milky Way (not counting the combined light from other galaxies), but our orbital speed around the galactic center is about 200 km/s, or roughly 11 million miles a day. The song is off by an order of magnitude.

However, I found where you can switch on DEBUG mode within the library (remove the comment in front of #define _DEBUG in the .h file). You can then see the command sequences being sent to the DFPlayer and what is being received back from it. If the command is sent with a 'Reply required' bit set (as the library does) in the command the module acknowledges the receipt of the command immediately. A little later it may send further messages reporting on the progress of the command. For commands that start a song playing this will include the message that the song has finished. In the example the arrival of these replies is detected and processed by

I have been using it like so in the past (with random success).. although pretty stable.. when trying to transition from a .play(#) command... (checking for it to be finished).. and then going to a .loop(#) command...

internally the DFPlayer MUST reliably detecting when a song is complete (whether its sending callbacks once or twice).. because you call a .loop(#) command.. internally the boards know when its done..... and (for the most part) seamlessly plays it again.

The other point I meant to add is that the Finished message contains a reference to the track that has finished. It would be nice to use this to cross-check which track has now finished however it appears to be returning the index number of the track on the SD card which is not necessarily the number that you requested to play. If you requested to play a track in the MP3 folder (playMp3Folder() command = 0x12) or play a track in a numbered folder (playFolder() command = 0x0F) the file number returned is different. So I reckon the best solution is to ignore the returned file number and just suppress duplicate replies.

A song can be defined as a musical and metrical composition which comprises a lyrics (words) in rhymed stanzas and melody, that is meant to be performed by using the human voice (vocals), especially in combination with musical instruments.

Any music that falls under the umbrella of Creative Commons is free for use without a license. With that said, Creative Commons songs have specific requirements and restrictions that you must abide by unless you want to be accused of copyright infringement.

However, royalty-free music is not necessarily free. Often, you will have to purchase a single license to use the song. You can purchase these licenses through platforms like Mubert.

For starters, the licensing process is far simpler compared to that of copyrighted music. Plus, if you license custom-made royalty-free compositions, you can still obtain top-quality, high-fidelity music that matches the quality of your favorite copyrighted songs.

You might remember the massive avalanche of DMCA takedown warnings and copyright strikes that occurred on Twitch back in 2020. After that, Twitch created the Twitch Song Library, which has more than 1,000 pre-cleared songs for use on the platform.

And finally, my biggest improvements and quantum leaps forward in my own ear training have happened when I took the time to think long and hard to find my answer. For example, when I went on vacation for a week with my family, and we listened to certain songs on the radio which I would transcribe in my head. Then I would have to wait an entire week before we returned home and I could finally test my answers on the piano.

A copyrighted piece of music is designed to protect the intellectual property of its creators by giving them and only them exclusive rights to use their work however they want. Everybody else needs to get permission, or a license, from the copyright holder to use their song, usually for a fee.

"Time for Your Checkup" is an original song sung in most episodes. Sung by Doc, Stuffy, Lambie, and Hallie. Later starting in Season 2, Chilly joined in singing the song. The song can be found on the CD's Doc McStuffins: The Doc Is In and Disney Junior DJ Shuffle. It is sung as Doc and the main toys prepare to give toy patients a checkup. 006ab0faaa

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