'Record Club,' the Letterboxd for Music, Gets a Lot Right ...Middle East

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Record Club, the Letterboxd for Music, Gets a Lot Right

Letterboxd has created a cozy online space for film lovers to get together—those who truly appreciate the art form, and who want to compile lists, aggregate ratings, and share their movie opinions with others. Its success has led to other similar platforms appearing in its slipstream, such as Binge.

Record Club, which actually first opened its doors a couple of years ago, is continuing to grow and getting more attention as a potential Letterboxd for music enthusiasts. Music has been a major part of my life since my teens—across cassette tapes, CDs, MP3s, and streaming services—so I was keen to give it a try.

    The snap verdict after a few days: It definitely gets a lot right, from the elegant look of the interface to the depth you can go down to when it comes to logging the details of your listening history. If you're looking for somewhere to share your music tastes and track your listening, it's worth a look.

    Record Club is free to use with no ads, with a $4-per-month subscription available if you want to support the project. You get some extras such as better list management and the ability to choose preferred cover art in your library. You also get extensive personalized stats, and the ability to add personalized notes to releases.

    Record Club is easy to navigate

    When you first sign up for Record Club, you'll be given a quick tour of the interface and the features, and it's a well laid-out app on both web and mobile: There's lots of white space and text that's crisp and bold, and it's easy to read. Right away, you can see what's popular with other users, new releases coming up, and reviews that have been left on the platform.

    Click through on any album, and you get a bunch of information about it. There's the track listing, plus details on how popular the album is on the Record Club network (its average rating and number of listeners, as well as reviews). You can see when it was originally released, and its total running time.

    Everything is very clickable, searchable, and social. Follow a link to another user (you'll be given suggestions for who to follow as soon as you get started), and you get to see what they're currently listening to, their top five records, the reviews they've left on releases, and which upcoming releases they're planning to listen to.

    You'll find all the music you listen to on Record Club. Credit: Lifehacker

    Your own profile will be viewable by default: You can make changes to it by clicking on your avatar (top right), then choosing Settings > Profile. Switch to Preferences and you get to control some of the ways that Record Club works, and under Privacy you can choose what's shown on your profile, or make it private (so only people who know your username will be able to find you).

    You can bring previous listening data over from Rate Your Music or Last.fm (which I'm a particular fan of), and imports from Spotify are apparently coming soon. Your Record Club data can be exported as and when needed, so you don't have to worry about your listening history staying trapped here forever.

    The headers along the top of the web interface link to the key sections of the platform: Browse (for checking out new music), Community (for checking out what other listeners are up to), and Activity (for reviewing your own listening). It's really when you start to use the tracking and social features of Record Club that it really comes into its own though, and when the Letterboxd comparisons become most apt.

    How to get started with Record Club

    You can start sharing what you're listening to by heading to the Record Club home page and clicking Add release under Your rotation. Your rotation is where you log what you're currently listening to, and you can have five albums (or singles or EPs) here—if you try and add a sixth, something else will have to go.

    Finding new music couldn't be any easier: Type the name of the artist and album, and it'll quickly pop up. You don't have to keep music titles in your rotation pile to tell Record Club that you've listened to them, as you can click the three dots on any cover art across the site and choose Listen to log it.

    There's also Queue for music you want to listen to but haven't done yet, and the option to leave a rating or a review. I tend to leave ratings much more often than reviews, as they're easier: I'm usually agonizing over the right words to say in a review and the right tone to take, and then I end up not publishing it anyway.

    List-making is one of the key features of Record Club. Credit: Lifehacker

    It didn't take me long to log a lot of listening through the Record Club interface, as there were always related links and recommendations that took me where I wanted to go next. There's also the option to use tags if you want to be more specific in the way you're organizing your music collection.

    If you head to your profile page by clicking your avatar (top right) and then Profile, you get your very own top five albums of all time to show off—just click Edit next to the relevant section to make your choices. One neat touch: If you click the three dots by the top five, you can save these picks as an image, so you can share them on other platforms as well.

    I like making lists, too. Click Create up at the top of the web interface and you're able to choose List to start making some public or private lists. You can organize your favorite albums in a particular genre, a starter pack of songs for a specific band, the best double albums in history, or whatever it is you want to list.

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