![]() Hollywood Keeps Condemning Good Directors to Franchise Dreck. Simone Biles Just Shocked the Gymnastics World Againīillionaires Are Holding a Gun to the Culture Industry’s Head Netflix’s New Show Stars Matthew Broderick as Richard Sackler. And it worked! (It did take a while-the amount of time it takes to get a track from your digital music library onto your Stem Player is roughly how long it takes to listen to the track in question.) Now, not only could I isolate Jamerson’s bass part by banishing Stevie Wonder and the rest of the Funk Brothers, I could also listen to “Gaucho” with Jeff Porcaro’s drums slightly quieter and slap some feedback on Lee Morgan’s trumpet break on “Locomotion,” two things I’d never once wanted to do before and will now never do again. (Well, I ruined some of my favorite music I got the Stem Player for free from Kano for review purposes.) Using the Stem Player website, I uploaded three quite different but impeccably mixed pieces of music in stem form to my player: John Coltrane’s 1958 hard-bop classic “Locomotion” Stevie Wonder’s 1967 hit “I Was Made to Love Her,” which features one of the greatest bass lines of Motown virtuoso James Jamerson and the title track to Steely Dan’s 1980 Gaucho, one of the most fussed-over albums by perhaps the fussiest band in history. The worst thing I can say about the Stem Player is pretty much everything else I have to say about it. Suffice it to say, this is not the optimal user experience for a “portable” music player. If you don’t have your laptop with you and aren’t near an internet connection but want to make even minor adjustments to your player while on the go, you’re out of luck. ![]() Finally, the only way to configure the player, add or remove tracks from it, learn what is uploaded onto it, or really do pretty much anything with it at all is to plug it into your computer via a USB-C cable and access the Stem Player website. The haptic interface also causes the player to occasionally skip or otherwise glitch if you accidentally touch it incorrectly. The Stem Player comes with a mere 8GB of storage, a tiny amount of space considering the size of the files you’ll be loading onto it (to say nothing of how long West’s own albums tend to be). If this sounds unbelievably tedious, that’s mitigated by the fact that you won’t have very much music to sift through. It also means that if you want to go to a specific track, you need to cycle through the whole player until you find it, since there’s no search interface. ![]() The lack of a screen (which, at $200, has to be an aesthetic choice rather than a budgetary one) means that you can’t actually tell what you’re listening to unless it’s music you already know. For starters, the Stem Player fails at being even a half-decent music player.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |