I primarily use Spotify through my web browser( Opera GX), and when I place more than 10,000 songs on my liked song list it no longer plays. Attempting to play the liked songs list at this point will result in a "this content is not available" message.

I have 15,000 songs in my Liked songs folder which I suspect is the source of the problem on the Web Player in Chromium browser. I have the plugins installed and can actually play music through other playlists without problem.


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It works in the desktop app and the mobile app, but not a browser. The in-browser and Xbox One players are the only ones I've tried that are having trouble. This problem has occurred for me over 2 different networks. My liked songs are around 18,000. I hope that's not what's causing it because that's really the only playlist I want to listen to. I don't want to create multiple smaller ones, and I definitely don't want to go back to Pandora

I've tried it on two different Wi-Fi networks already. It's definitely not the network. Other playlists seem fine, whether made by me or a pre-made playlist. I can shuffle artists or albums without issue. I have yet to try a playlist nearly the size of my liked songs, though. I don't really want to make a 15,000 song playlist just to test this.

Trying to play the liked song list in other browsers results in the same message, and the desktop app does not display the list at all. For further information: when I set about to like the songs I first added them to a custom playlist. This was so that I could scroll down the playlist to quickly like a large number of songs. When I liked all songs in the playlist I deleted it. I did not play the liked list before deleting the custom playlist, but unliking songs to bring the like list below 10,000 renders it playable again. Liking songs to bring above 10,000 renders it unplayable. Oddly enough even though I deleted the playlist a shortcut for it still appears on my home page. I can still access the playlist and it plays songs as normal.

Do only your Liked Songs appear as empty in the desktop app or any playlist? What happens if you double-click on your Liked Songs in the left-side menu - do the songs play or are you getting an error message?

Since passing 10,000 liked songs, I can't play them in the web player, on FireStick or XBOX. Can't double click 'Liked Songs' in the sidebar on Web Player, the big play button doesn't work either. Can't play any individual tracks from the list. It only works on the PC app or on my phone. But even then, you can't use Spotify Connect to start playing on PC or mobile and move it over to the web player or a TV app. This has only happened since adding 10,000 liked songs, it worked totally fine before reaching the old limit.

I have seen online that you can pull data from websites using the IMPORTHTML function in Google Sheets. However, you can only import tables and lists. I have tried both of these on the Billboard top 100 chart list but because they are separated into divs, not lists nor tables, I cannot seem to get it to work.

When I was writing A More Beautiful Question, or, more accurately when I was procrastinating from writing the book, I began compiling the below list of songs that have questions in the title AND that I like (for the most part). Then four years later, I once again turned to this playlist while researching and writing my follow-up book, The Book of Beautiful Questions.

Ready, Set, Plan! Choose from the pre-built lessons, the song list, or create your own from scratch! Musicplay is a menu and includes paths for Orff and Kodaly specialists and general classroom teachers. This resource also works well as a printable lesson planning guide and includes: year plans, scope & sequence, month outlines, song notation and activities. There are curriculum correlations suggested to help connect to other areas.Our pre-built lessons for every week of the school year are fully customizable and include everything you need - from an introduction to supporting resources and teaching procedures. With My Lists, organizing your lessons has never been easier. You can create a My List from scratch or edit an existing lesson. Say goodbye to lesson planning stress and bring your focus back to the classroom experience!

Discover new songs, familiar songs, copyrighted songs, and choral pieces. Most of the songs have notation and lyric videos, downloadable accompaniment tracks, piano and ukulele/guitar arrangements, teaching suggestions, printable worksheets and posters, song-specific interactive activities, and projectable notation and lyric slides.

Each unit is full of all kinds of resources. Find units for festivals and holidays, countries around the world, dance selections, listening units, school programs and musicals, orchestra families, literacy supports, and music theory.

A common way to recognize intervals is to associate them with reference songs that you know well. For example, the song Amazing Grace begins with a perfect fourth. So when you hear an interval that sounds like the 2 first notes of Amazing Grace, you know instantly that it's a Perfect 4th.

Song lists are great, Ear Training is even better!

Using famous songs to memorize intervals is an easy way to memorize intervals, but that method has limits. At some point, you will need to recognize intervals instantly, almost instinctively. This can only be achieved with Ear Training.

ASCAP's customer licensees include: Airlines, Amusement Parks, Bars, Restaurants & Nightclubs, Colleges & Universities, Concert Presenters, Music Venues & Clubs, Convention & Trade Shows, Fitness Clubs, Hotels, Local Government Entities, Radio & Television Stations and Networks, Mobile Entertainment, Websites, Retail Stores and music users in a wide variety of other industries. See the complete list of ASCAP license types on this website. There are over 100 different ASCAP rate schedules covering almost all businesses that perform music.

ASCAP does not license "dramatic" or "grand" rights, or dramatic performances. ASCAP members who write musical plays, operas, or ballet scores deal directly with those who want to perform our members' works "dramatically." While ASCAP does not license "dramatic" or "grand" rights, or dramatic performances of its members' music, an ASCAP license does authorize nondramatic performances of songs from dramatic productions. For more information on "dramatic" or "grand" rights and the distinction between dramatic and nondramatic performances, click here.

The JLO is a joint venture of the United States performing rights organizations, ASCAP, BMI and SESAC. The JLO offers a license which provides total access to all songs in the ASCAP, BMI and SESAC repertories. The Jukebox License Agreement is a single, economical, annual license that provides the authorization required to publicly perform copyrighted songs on a jukebox. Jukeboxes that are licensed by the JLO, must display a certificate in the title strip holder of each jukebox. If you see a jukebox without a certificate, please complete and return the Tips card or email the name and address of the location and name of jukebox operator (if known) to licensingexecutive@jukeboxlicense.org.

Copyright law does not define the terms "dramatic" or "nondramatic." As a result, rightsholders, music users and occasionally the federal courts must attempt to draw the line between "dramatic" and "nondramatic" performances. That line is often unclear and depends on the facts pertaining to a particular performance. As a general rule a dramatic performance usually involves using the work to tell a story or as part of a story or plot. Thus, when songs are employed as part of a dramatic performance -- a Broadway musical such as Jersey Boys or in a ballet such as Twyla Tharp's Nine Sinatra Songs, for example -- the performances of the music are dramatic and are beyond the scope of an ASCAP license.

The "nondramatic" public performances of musical compositions that ASCAP licenses on behalf of its members include, for example, recordings of songs that are broadcast on radio (other than an entire -- or substantially complete -- recording of a dramatico-musical work), songs or background music performed as part of a movie or other television program, or live or recorded performances of musical compositions in a bar, restaurant, hotel, store or other place open to the public.

When you see the Songview checkmark next to a song, you know that the songwriters, publishers and ownership shares shown on the ASCAP and BMI websites are accurate, reliable and consistent between the two PROs. 0852c4b9a8

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