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Pandora Memories – Part One

ScottPandora
Pandora
Pandora

As you may be aware, Pandora is currently celebrating its 20th birthday! Before Pandora’s historic launch as the one of the first personalized online radio platforms, we were a company called Savage Beast. And Savage Beast’s big idea was something called The Music Genome Project.

 The Music Genome Project has been extensively covered here and elsewhere, but, in a nutshell, Savage Beast’s founder, Tim Westergren had the idea that if you analyzed music on a song-by-song basis, that information could be used to create playlists that would help listeners discover new music they loved.

The Music Genome Project worked, and here we are twenty years later, one fifth of the way to building the hundred-year company that Westergren envisioned.

 

San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers/Contributor/Getty ImagesSan Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers/Contributor/Getty Images

 

One of the amazing secondary impacts of the Music Genome Project is that it created an engaging, sustainable day job for a bunch of serious musicians. Not only could they earn more than a couple drink tickets to put their musical training to use, but they were helping lesser-known music reach people who might actually enjoy hearing it.

In fact, it was such a satisfying and rewarding job, that Music Analysts invested long-term in the project. Our small team of 22 accounts for a whopping 321 years of Pandora experience (that’s an average of over 14 years per person!!), many of us surpassing the twenty-year mark, actually predating the launch of the product, with the department head of our little family, Steve Hogan, recently hitting the quarter-century mark; the most senior member of the entire Pandora staff.

Steve Hogan, Senior Director of Music AnalysisSteve Hogan, Senior Director of Music Analysis

 

Over the coming weeks, I’ll bring you some early Pandora and pre-Pandora memories from a handful of us Music Genome long-haulers. The history of this company stretches all the way back to 2000, the tail end of the first wave of the online tech industry. It’s a story of innovation and perseverance and the transformation of how we all experience music in the 21st century.

As for me, I recall being among the very last Music Analysts interviewed directly by founder Tim Westergren, in a small corner office in a very quiet downtown Oakland, a world away from the buzzing tech hub just over the bridge in SF. For my interview test (administered by newly minted manager, Steve Hogan) I had to analyze Sugar Magnolia by the Grateful Dead. I was left alone with a CD player, a pair of headphones, a Casio keyboard and a pencil and paper to work out the musicological details.

 

ScottPandora_1-1760625400997.jpeg

 

 

My start date was 10/18/2004 along with Jeffrey Burr who currently oversees our priority pipelines… and me (he’s also my manager).

According to our databases, the first album I analyzed was Once by Nightwish, though I can’t say I recall the experience.

 

ScottPandora_2-1760625400997.jpeg

 

I do, however, recall the giant demo kiosks that occupied a corner of our cramped offices. One of the original pre-Pandora ideas was to set up these hulking machines at places like Best Buy where you could type in the name of a band or album you liked, and our Music Genome intelligence would recommend a different album for you to purchase at the store, based on your personal tastes.

Needless to say, we took the business in a different direction.

7 Comments
mad-no-mad
Underground

Congratulations and Happy Anniversary! I'll toss in a couple of my related minor memories (aside from early on being surprised and proud you're in Oakland too). I loved the very early days of listening to streams and wondering why a song was being played even though it somehow fit in the same way a good DJ creates an odd but cool segue, so I clicked on "Why Am I Hearing This Song" (or whatever the actual wording was) and getting a cool explanation of how the rhythms or bpms or key's or instrumentation fit together. And then coming up to the offices and auditioning as a voice talent for the very early ads and recording a few. And here we all are, years later. Me still listening to Pandora and now also having my music played on there!

Thanks!

Mad Dog
mad/no/mad

P.S. I don't know just when I started using Pandora but a calendar search shows I came over to Webster St to do a VO on April 12, 2011. 

Wendel
Local Performer

Congratulations and Happy Anniversary! thank-you for the 20 year badge recognition. Early days felt like a revolutionary way of thinking about music. I had the privilege of talking with Tim Westergren about Pandora ideas early on. I still have the "I 👍 Pandora" t-shirt received from Pandora.

Congrats again.

Thanks for allowing me to come along on your journey. It's been a blast.

Regards,

Wendel Chamberlin

 

ShanColeman
Underground
Hello ShanColeman,

Re: Pandora Memories – Part One

Hi Wendel,
Thank you so much for your heartfelt message! We truly appreciate your
recognition and support as we celebrate 20 incredible years of Pandora.
It’s wonderful to hear about your early interactions with Tim Westergren
and to know that you still cherish your "I 👍 Pandora" t-shirt!
Having you as part of our journey has made it all the more special. The
innovative spirit and passion for music that you embody have played a
significant role in shaping the Pandora experience we know today.
Here’s to many more years filled with great music and memories!
Warm regards,
Shan Coleman
TOOLIE634
Opening Act
Congrats
Wendel
Local Performer

Shan,

Thanks for the personal contact and reply.

Enjoy the holiday season.

Continued success.



Regards,

WC



mod edit: removed personal information / email signature

Ha
Underground

I've been a member since 12/8/2005, and may be one of the oldest accounts still active on the platform, though I don't have any data on that. It would be cool to have more insights like that!

Either way, I've stuck with Pandora all these years because as other services have come along, I've never found a platform which served the right stuff at the right time the same way Pandora has. Although I'd love to be paying less for Premium, I'm happy to support the platform that has done right by me for these last 20 years.

musicaddict808
Local Performer

Happy 20th!

I too have been with the platform consistently I think since the first year or two (I can’t find a link to verify this). It’s the only music streaming service I will use. I found many new bands and for several years now have used the paid subscription service.
I’m a Pandora Lifer, keep up the great work Pandora.