Download and Listen to Free Music on the Web

Hey, I know you. RIAA lawsuits have scared you off P2P, but the iTunes DRM is both too expensive and too restrictive for your tastes, right? Then it's time you head to the web. In the past year the number of web sites linking to free downloads and streaming music has exploded, meaning there are more ways than ever to get your music fix. Today I'll highlight the best web sites—and best search kung-fu—for finding free music online. Photo by MarS.
We covered this territory over two years ago, but believe me, a lot has changed in that time.
MP3 Search Engines and Streaming Sites
First I'm going to take a look at sites that make it easy to both stream and download music, starting with my favorite of the bunch: The Hype Machine.

The Hype Machine aggregates MP3s from the vast world of music blogs. Searching for an artist in The Hype Machine returns tonnes of results, and you can stream the songs inline in the results. The site itself provides links to buy music at Amazon or in iTunes if it's available, but you can also click through the read the original blog post containing the song and download music directly from that site. What's more, the handy player at the bottom of The Hype Machine's page creates a playlist of all the results on a page, you can favorite items to build playlists, and more. Most of the sites in the section are brand new, but Hype Machine has time on its side, having been around since 2005. (Read more)
SeeqPod is a straight up MP3 search engine at first glance, but after you perform your first search you'll notice a fancy Flash app that makes it easy to create playlists in your browser via a simple drag-and-drop interface. SeeqPod doesn't have easy to find download links for the songs, but the URLs are readily available if you're willing to do the typing. Even cooler, though, SeeqPod has an iPhone/iPod touch-optimised interface for streaming any song you search for directly in mobile Safari. (Read more)
SkreemR is another simple, barebones MP3 search engine. Like Hype Machine, SkreemR pulls its content from across the internet and can stream any song in your brower, but it has simple download links for every file you listen to so you don't need to follow it to the source. (Read more)
Thesixtyone has positioned itself to be a Digg-like community for music, which makes it a great place to discover new music (though it still handles search like the rest of them). Some songs on Thesixtyone include direct links for downloads, while others only provide links to buy the music on Amazon MP3. (Read more)
Deezer is a well designed site with more of a focus on building playlists, rating songs, and other more advanced feature for users (you can even view and listen to entire albums!). Like the others listed above, you can find tonnes of great music there, but download links can be hard to come by. (Read more)
BeeMP3 isn't really about streaming music or making playlists—it's more of a straight search and download site, providing details like bitrate, format, and frequency of the encoded music file. You can't preview music, but you can sure download it. (Read more)
Most of the music you'll find on Songza consists of live recordings, which is excellent for finding rare songs or performances, but unfortunately Songza isn't much for providing download links—but at least they embed nicely (as you can see above). (Read more)
For those of you who want to make sure that you're not downloading any copyrighted material, CCHits aggregates Creative Commons-only music so you can download anything you want, guilt-free. (Read more)
Tools to Streamline Your MP3 Downloads
Now that you know where to download all that music from your browser, you'll probably need a few tools to streamline the process.
If you're an iTunes user, might I recommend the Windows-only add-on Tunestor, which adds a "Download Directly to iTunes" option to you right-click context menu in both Firefox and Internet Explorer so that you don't have to go through the rigmarole of the save and move to iTunes process every time you find a new song you like. (Read more)
Alternately, iTunes lovers may also want to check out iTunes Folder Watch, a freeware Windows app that can monitor folders of your choosing (your Downloads folder, for example) and automatically add your new songs to your iTunes library. (Read more)
If you just can't seem to find a download link but you'd kill to get a hold of the song that's streaming in your browser, stream rippers like StationRipper and Screamer Radio can easily do the dirty work for you.
Tools to Download and Listen to Your Music Over the Internet
Finally, they may require a bit more work on your part than the options above, but if you're willing to take a few minutes you can easily access your own music library anywhere with one of the following tools.
Anywhere.fm lets you upload your entire music library to their servers using their uploader application (for not that's free), stream, and manage it using a very iTunes-like browser-based Flash player. It also has a great social aspect that allows you to stream music from other users' libraries. Not too shabby. (Read more)
If you'd rather not put the keys to your music in someone else's hands, Orb, a freeware, Windows-only application that streams music from your home computer to any other computer through your web browser. It takes a little setting up, but we walk you through it here.
Googling You Free Muisc
No discussion about finding free music on the web would be complete without mentioning the classic Google search that can yield tonnes of results of directories full of downloadable MP3s. First, there's the straight-up Google search chock full of operators to find those music files in open directories:
Where you replace the "artist|album|track|etc" section with whatever you're searching for... like this one. You can also tweak the search to yield other search results, looking for other filetypes (it's looking for WMAs and MP3s above).
If you don't want to go through the hassle of remembering that long URL every time, turn it into a Firefox keyword bookmark.
Alternately, there's the free, open source application Google Hacks, which is designed specifically to do the dirty work of searching for whatever files (music, video, or otherwise) available in Google-land. (Read more)
Surely we've missed a favourite or two, so if you've got a resource for finding free music on the web worth mentioning, let's hear it in the comments.
Adam Pash is a senior editor for Lifehacker who's methods for finding free music know no bounds. His special feature Hack Attack appears weekly on Lifehacker AU.



View: AU Comments (4) | US Comments (64 comments)
Well I thought I could post about skreemr and deezer but seems there already here, congratulations on putting the best things in your list I guess...
I use this site: www.movideo.com it has quite high quality and a pretty diverse range of tracks.
eighties nineties heavy metal would be good cheers guys
thank you so much for the music (cheers)
ahhh...i hate it when i have to scroll all the way to the end of an article just to see the date it was posted - anyone find that annoying?
brandonjp
There's also an old program that you can find on the web. It's called MyStreamer. You run the program. specify the local music folders, listening port, and page layout. It indexes your mp3 files, and creates a web page that you can access from anywhere and stream your own media library. It's a small program, with very little system overhead, (I was running it on a P2 300mhz using win2k) but it gives you good play functions.
I think it was like 25 bucks on the web....but pirates can probably find it for free somewhere....
thejoker2099
I had never heard of Anywhere.fm before. I've been using lala for discovering new music, and they also have a similar music upload service and online player. Sadly, I've tried both online players and they still seem a bit buggy to me.
The CD trading on Lala, though, is awesome!
brmyers
All of these were really great links. Unfortunately some of the songs I'm looking for are obscure. The songza site managed to find one of the bands I like. Anyone know of a site that would be able to find something like that?
sorata
No mention of mp3tunes? It works similarly to AnywhereFM; it's free and has unlimited storage and streaming which is great for backups:
[www.mp3tunes.com]
legendofzeke
@BRETTT
meaning downloadable via search [www.seeqpod.com]
or browse a limited selection and download here [www.seeqpod.com]
Kid Finesse
I use Seeqpod at school all the time. It's really quite convenient, especially since I'm basically in the computer lab all day.
The Hype Machine is great, though! I'd never seen that one.
TimTheSuperGuy
Thanks for the article and the comments it generated - I've been building a library of "podsafe" or copyright-free music lately, and some of those links will come in handy.
I've written an article documenting how I discovered, downloaded, organized songs, including how I use software mentioned by Lifehacker like tag2find. I use a lot of what I read here!
You can find the article here:
[www.noshrinkwrap.com]
Cris
Much of the free downloads are hosted on blogspot blogs. Using this knowledge considerably helps finding songs with Google, use site:blogspot.com as part of your search, example:
radiohead site:blogspot.com
of course, blogspot.com can be something else like wordpress.com or livejournal.com:
Feist site:wordpress.com
rickdog
not a download site, but I've set-up a pandora like player which streams music from MySpace. You can check it out at ZiFiMusic.com
Still a work in progress, lots of changes to come.
pedalpete
This is a great little article!! Thesixtyone is an awesome website. I really enjoy that it's a game to discover new artists!
On the subject of new artists and free music, feel free to check out my band (Acres Of Lions) free ep on our website...
www.acresoflions.com
cheers,
tyson
tyerex
opss...don't know what happen. i meant to write elbo.ws
+greenpeace+
if you mention the hype machine, it would be a crime not to mention elb !
+greenpeace+
I like projectplaylist :)
ahoier
My favourite site for streaming music has to be Independent Artists Company (www.iacmusic.com) which is set up exclusively for unreleased material and unsigned artists. It does not allow you to download music unless you pay the artist for their songs (and they get every penny of the price) but you can set up "radio stations" and group your collections together to listen to on-line any time. You can put you station in a standalone player on your website, blog or facebook. Also, listeners and musicians can communicate directly or through the forum. It's a great resource for finding new artists before they hit the mainstream and for musicians to find others to collaborate with. Joining the community is free and it is also free for musicians to add up to three of their songs (there is a modest fee for more). If you want to discover NEW music and support artists directly, this is the site for you.
dublinjames
If you don't mind weathering a little (all right: a lot of) German, you can find an enormous number of free downloads at www.tonspion.de. They collect links to promotional downloads from bands and their labels, so it's absolutely legal. Search is located on the top right of the page, where it says "Suchbegriff(e)".
str88f
Another site is We7 [www.we7.com] (I am CTO). All songs are downloadable and DRM free and the catalogue is expanding significantly over the next few months. Its ad funded so there is a short ad at the beginning of the track that you can get rid of after set amount of time. Its completely legal so the artists are paid. There is also a new artists section where musicians can upload their music for peer review and if they get the thumbs up they start earning revenue just like signed artists.
gareth_reakes
I, myself, am a big fan of Songbird. There have been previous posts on Lifehacker about Songbird. It allows you to go to any website and it extracts the MP3s from that website, then available for download. Hype Machine is one of the many recommended music blogs to search music.
Andrew Grimm
I'm working on [avidbeauty.com] and the new beta will be out soon. It currently features just podcasts, but new content will be added in the coming months.
underpants
Slacker.com is really good. Listen for free, they also do a subscription option. No commercials, even if you're only listening for free!
kilik
You can't forget the oldest MP3 blog on the internet, serving up one free and legal MP3 winner every day since 2000: MP3 Jackpot.
Also check out its sister site MP3 4U, built by music lovers charting the MP3 universe one song at a time.
alienprotocol
I always used www.spool.fm after it was released. It seems to get the job done and it makes it easy to share what songs you listen to.
gmlime
I wanted to mention slimserver for streaming your itunes library via OS X, Windows XP, or Linux. You can control the bitrate of the outgoing stream, so I've even managed to stream it to my pocket pc phone via the EDGE network.
Also, there's a wealth of good music on youtube, with lots of sites that will rip and encode the audio into MP3 for you online. I've written a tutorial on how to do it here:
Rip MP3s from youtube online
jordan314
I like Jamendo for free music.
Pandora is great, but Canadians can't use it any more. :(
Also, you spelled "music" wrong in "googling for music"
threecheersfornick
Can't believe nobody mentioned pandora.
CK76
Don't forget about [ilike.com] for streaming music.
[www.mahalo.com]
SaraMahalo
One site that I've grown fond of is
[www.b3ta.cr3ation.co.uk]
It searches dogpile, seeqpod, and a few other sites for music. It also searches for related videos. You can click on the name of the song to play it in the built in browser. It has a nice and simple download link as well. For all you iphone users out there, there is also an iphone interface. I highly recommend this site.
Another site that works pretty well is
[g2p.org]
It takes care of remembering those long and complicated google search queries. You just select what type of media you are looking for, and it does the rest.
Cheater
Instead of using that long google search i just use g2p.org to do all the dirty work for me. I prefer it over google hacks, but that's just me.
ffantasyv
I've been using this new site - www.meloditrax.com It has a nice auto suggestion box, and loads the results pretty quickly too. Looks like a promising site :)
dracnortw
I've been using SpiralFrog. Its a free legal site although it has its drawbacks. Although you can download fairly easily and quickly, they do not have a lot of bands out there, and you can only transfer the songs to a non-apple affiliated mp3 player, and you can't burn the songs apparently.
svenskporr
hint hint hint hint.
you can use the seeqpod iphone interface on your computer.
and since the iphone can only stream mp3's, and does not support flash...... ;-)
brettt
Im actually happy to find thesixtyone, as now I dont have to include all genres and can focus on hip-hop/rap on my work in progress. They do it better than i ever could anyways :D
silvanov
I have become a huge fan of thesixtyone, but with the lack of a negative "bump" I think it is going to start having some major gaming issues. I still recommend it for alternative rock more indie rock music, but the hippity hop is starting to filter in, and with no way to kill it, it will be ripe for marketing games.
btgoss
You can upload your music to Deezer as well (although its playlist creation tools leave a lot to be desired)
celldrifter
I enjoy using SkreemR to find any music I want to check out before getting a whole CD. They also have a handy Facebook app that allows you to stream music there.
Woodsyx
Good article Adam.
Readers may want to check Songbird, the Firefox of media player too. Many of these Web services work well within Songbird.
[songbirdnest.com]
roblord
I have a couple of blogs I'm addicted to that feature a huge number of independent artists.
For music in all genres, try Free Albums Galore:
freealbums.blogsome.com
And for metalheads of all types, Free Metal Albums is excellent:
freemetalalbums.blogspot.com
Both of the blogs spotlight albums that independent artists have chosen to feature for download on their websites.
lizzybee
I think the post has a typo in it. When writing about anywhere.fm you have "(for not that's free)." I believe you mean "(for now that's free)."
jdoree
A rather venerable, if little-known site is the Classical Music Archive. It was once known as the Classical MIDI Archive, and held MIDI sequences of classical music. With the expansion of consumer bandwidth, the site now offers free streaming audio. In addition, for a rather modest fee ($25 per year), high-quality MP3 files can be downloaded from the site.
DanYHKim
Not sure if its been mentioned, but the blogosphere is ripe with music for the masses as well. I'm currently working on a diggish like clone, yet to be named, for rap and hip hop music, and to make finding those obscure blogs, news sites, and forums easier for the end user. Check my progress if your interested on my blog, [silvanov.com]
silvanov
Project Playlist is cool too. It lets you search for songs and organize them into playlists, and listen to them via their streaming music player. It's been big with the Myspace crowd, but it's a pretty useful tool above and apart from Myspace.
HeartBurnKid
Dont know if anyone has mentioned WeBot, but its a nice little music sharing app that has a great MobileSafari interface. I've been using it on my iPod touch and am liking it so far.
trademark
I have been using last.fm, a streaming service.
Type in the name of an artist and you will get music by that artist, and similar artists, streaming to your puter. Register and download the application and you will not have to keep your browser open.
I am really enjoying the DEEP, and I mean some really deep cuts!
FastBytes
I miss Pandora...the only reason I don't like living in canada.
k8supergrover
You forgot to mention TasteStalkr.
varius
BroadClips MediaCatcher is far better than all of these.
bbgarman1
I'm a big fan of iMeem. Full-length streaming on-demand of tons of mainstream tunes, especially since they've signed deals with the 4 major labels. You can create playlists, listen to others', and upload your own stuff.
www.imeem.com
skooks777
Also check out Jamendo: [www.jamendo.com]
They have over 6000 full albums available for free and legal download. You don't even have to register.
greeze
Oh, and my original reason for posting in the comments: Is there any big difference between BeeMP3, Skreemr, and the Google MP3 search? Do they all just use the Google MP3 search schema to find MP3s in open directories on the web? Or are they just an interface?
pham
Useful summary of what's out there. I just sometimes wish Lifehacker copyedited their articles a bit more. :( Sometimes it's even hard to tell what Adam's talking about--unless it's supposed to be freestyle poetry.
pham
Use SeeqPod? Want to download without typing?
Use "Jaseeq": [modsyn.wordpress.com]
soapynebula
I'd like to plug Elbo.ws, a music blog aggregator:
[elbo.ws]
hackle577
I'm gonna drop [soundpedia.com] as a nice site to go to for listening to music on the interwebs.
Coming Into The DSPN, ♪Kanye West - Stronger♪ #JRoc, The Superstar Receiver, ofyourupperdeck TORONTOOO BJSSS
www.musicovery.com - listen to streaming music. Input your mood, genre, and/or era, and the tunes play continuously.
www.deezer.com - streaming music on demand
www.musgle.com - search for mp3 downloads; music + google = musgle.
FlipSwitch
I recently started a blog dedicated to highlighting my favourite free, legally available music that I've found on the Internet. You can check it out at [totallyfreemusic.blogspot.com] . I would really appreciate any feedback anyone has about it.
jeff.c.taylor
Pssst... Hey idolator- maybe you should pick up on this (if you haven't already?)...
nat lyon
I agree . . . a nice round-up. You can also search for any of the 100s of blogs that review and post mp3s to file-sharing sites such as Rapidshare, Badongo, or Megaupload.
Just find a blog that covers a style of music you like and you're set.
MonkeyMonk
jimmyr.com is an old standby for me. It it a modified google search, but it does all the tough stuff for you. Jimmy Rouska is the man!
TCameron
www.projectplaylist.com is also a good site to find music to stream online. They have most of the songs I look for but some of the very very new to radio songs they usually dont have.
leetgeek
I, for one, am a huge fan of ( radio3.cbc.ca ). While Canadian-specific in it's library (and really, there isn't enough of that on the intertents) it provides great tools for building playlists and a flexible flash player. I also look to download sites like www.zunior.com for free compilation albums. Huzzah for legally free music!
FlippantJ
Excellent roundup. Songza is way cool. If you prefer live recordings over pirated copies of CDs- check your local listings (google). I've found a number of truly awesome blogs that offer live recordings from local venues- like Bradley's Almanac.
nat lyon
That was an excellent overview. You might also want to check out "Beatking's Free Music Search & Conversion Tools", which is constantly being updated and includes tips from Lifehacker and other sites:
[www.beatking.com]
DudeAsInCool
I just find it easier to find sites that sell the music I want in the format I want without any hassle. Usually they're not run out of the US, but it's a global market now and it works both ways, fortunately for us and unfortunately for the RIAA.
By the way, not all itunes files have DRM now, and I think the DRM-free catalog will expand in the future. The polished UI and convenience are great. If they can get DRM-free entirely in the future, they'll be the one to beat, as long as the selection remains good.
I've also bought from amazon's MP3 store twice so far. It's not too bad and of course it works fine with my Mac, since MP3 is MP3. No complaints so far about Amazon.
Buran
www.archive.org is also a GREAT place for live music recordings, historical audio/video recordings, etc. It's a huge website with a ton of stuff.
Currently I'm listening to some old Edison cylinder phonographs from the early 20th century.
Tush