iTunes 9 Genius Mixes. Sort of.
Posted by: tygerbox in Mac, Tech, tags: iTunes, Playlists, ReviewI never really used the Genius feature in iTunes much since I pretty much have all of my shuffling goodness taken care of by a bunch of Smart Playlists. But I was pretty intrigued by the new Genius Mixes – 12 auto-generated radio station-like mixes derived from your library and Genius information. So I decided to give it a spin because it does sound pretty fun if it works.
The one that first jumped out as me was a mix based on Electric Light Orchestra, Steely Dan and Suga Shikao – a Japanese singer-songwriter that I like. I thought that this was an intriguing and eclectic starting spot for a mix. I also had them filed in different genres, so Genius was clearly not doing simple genre-matching. And hey, it seemed like it would work. So while I was working, I fired that one up to see what it came up with. Turns out that it would have been a good mix had I wanted to listen to an ELO song, followed by a Steely Dan song, followed by a Suga Shikao song, followed by an ELO song, lather, rinse, and repeat. Not so awesome.
Went back to the selection screen to seek a different mix. Perhaps the first one was a little too eclectic for the Genius algorithm. Ah-ha – one based on Queen, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin and Tom Petty. Certainly they can manage to toss together a serviceable classic rock mix. That one got off to a decent start with Honky Tonk Women, but in a couple moves I was getting Roxy Music ballads and some crappy NeoProg I didn’t know I even had. Now, while I realize having the crappy NeoProg was indeed my fault, in my defense I had forgotten about it, and either way, it really had no business being in that mix.
So I punted and went back to classic Genius configuration – select a specific tune and then hit the Genius button. At least that way you can see what is in the generated mix. I started off with Tempted by Squeeze – expecting a peppering of 80’s New Wave, assorted Power Pop and perhaps some other British singer-songwriters like Graham Parker or Richard Thompson. Instead it coughed up some Rush and pulled tracks from the single Grateful Dead album I have. Strike three.
Another flaw of note: it seems to completely ignore user ratings. I know not everyone rates all their stuff since it can be a pain. However, I would expect that it would prioritize on higher-rated stuff if someone had rated everything as I have. Apparently not.
I really like the Genius/Genius Mix idea, but sadly it still seems to be pretty half-baked. Time to go back to the good old Smart Playlists.

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