But now and again you might still want to pursue that thrill of downloading music for free. May we suggest you do so legally. And let us help you on this straightforward adventure.
1. NoiseTrade
NoiseTrade is a really good looking website with one of the biggest collections of actually good free songs from artists around the world. Their For Fans Of section for each artist tells you which mainstream icon their music most resembles to. With links to Dylan and Beastie Boys, you’ll know if you’ll enjoy the song or not even before going in. You can sample a song before you download. Every song is free to download but NoiseTrade does a good job at promoting the artists by suggesting you to tip them if you like their songs. As you grow older on the internet, you start to associate free with inferior. Let NoiseTrade prove you wrong. With NoiseTrade being a startup and a real business, there is one caveat. They want your information. When you try to download an album, NoiseTrade will ask you for your email address, country and your postal code and mail you the download link. If that’s fine with you, go ahead and download cool new free songs.
2. Free Music Archive
Free Music Archive is another contender for good free music, proclaiming it on their front page – “It’s not just free music; it’s good music”. The website is a combination of a blog and a download site. Which is good for beginners. You have curators who know their stuff writing about new free music, hunting down through the mess that is the internet and presenting you with the best, with reason. It’s a good place to be if you ear buds just started developing.
4. Last.fm
Are you a scrobbler? I bet you are. After all, you’re here to find more ways to fill your iPod. Last.fm is great when it comes to discovering new artists and songs. But they also have their own collection of free songs you can download easily. Cool Tip: If you are an IFTTT user you can use a simple recipe to automatically send new free music from Last.fm to Dropbox.
5. Live Music Archive
Live music has a different charm. A note that’s played different, a song sung in a totally different voice. Another great thing about live music is that most of it is not wrapped in 56 layers of contracts. A lot of it is basically freely available. Even music from the big guys like Grateful Dead and John Mayer. Live Music Archive is hosted on archive.org so navigating it might a bit difficult so use the search function to get to where you need to be.
6. Overclocked ReMix (Video Game Soundtracks)
Video game soundtracks are awesome. If you’ve played a puzzler or a platformer game, you know that. Video game music is specially devised to improve your concentration while not sucking you in completely. It’s also why it makes for great background music when you need to concentrate and do some work/study. Go to the site and wander around till you find something you like.
7. Insound
Insound is an online e-commerce store with a unique collection of vinyls for sale. But they also have a free MP3s section, and a pretty sizeable one at that.
8. MusicBox
MusicBox is a new service, which like Death To Stock Photo, curates the best new free music from around the web and emails them to you every two weeks.
9. Epitonic
Epitonic is a carefully curated music magazine for the web. There’s tight editorial control over every song that makes it in, which means you get a wholly superior listening experience.
10. Jamendo
Jamendo is one of NoiseTrade’s biggest competitors. It’s been around for a long time and used by indie legends like Sean Fournier to deliver their free albums and, depending on your usage, it’s even better. You don’t need to give your email address to download an album. There’s a popup to connect to Facebook when you try to stream a song but just close it and carry on as it does not affect the playback function. Oh, and it also has apps for iOS, Android and Windows so you can keep streaming free songs even when you are on the go.
Bonus
Your Favorite?
Got any favorite site to download free music from (legally, of course) that we missed in the above list? Why not help your fellow GT readers by sharing it in the comments. The above article may contain affiliate links which help support Guiding Tech. However, it does not affect our editorial integrity. The content remains unbiased and authentic.