What happened to Last.fm radio?
Last.fm’s interactive radio product—once central for many listeners—was heavily curtailed for most users by licensing and regional constraints. Scrobbling, charts, and catalog metadata continue, but always-on, discovery-radio in the original sense is no longer the default experience globally.
What Last.fm radio did well
It connected taste profiles to suggestions, surfaced “neighbour” listening, and gave rock fans vocabulary to explore adjacent artists without wading through impersonal charts.
What rock fans actually miss
A continuous station that respects guitar music’s internal genres—where Britpop isn’t an afterthought and prog isn’t reduced to novelty. They miss hitting play once and staying inside a coherent audio world.
Comparison table
| Factor | Last.fm (current era) | New Clear Radio |
|---|---|---|
| Free radio streaming | Limited / region-dependent radio experience compared to the classic era | Rock-focused continuous stream with transparent bitrate options |
| Genre depth for rock | Discovery via scrobbles, not always a live radio workflow | Human-leaning rock, Britpop, prog, and classic rock sequencing |
| Audio quality | Depends on linked services; not a first-party hi-fi radio focus | Up to 320kbps where supported |
| Music discovery | Strong taste graph, neighbours, and catalogue metadata | Station-depth discovery inside guitar-driven formats |
| Scrobbling / tracking | Core strength—listening history & stats | Not a scrobbling platform |
| Mobile app | Mature Last.fm companion experience | Dedicated player apps for streaming-first listeners |
| Price | Freemium catalogue tracking; partners handle playback | Streaming tiers per region/promotion |
Why New Clear Radio fills the gap for rock listeners specifically
New Clear Radio is narrower on purpose: rock-first programming, bitrate control, and sequencing aimed at fans who lived through Last.fm’s golden age but now want fidelity and curation without rebuilding playlists daily.
What New Clear Radio doesn't do
There is no global scrobbling graph or algorithmic taste neighbour system—honesty matters. If your joy is charts, stats, and exportable histories, keep Last.fm (or parallel tools) alongside New Clear Radio.
The verdict: who should switch, who shouldn't
Switch primary listening if you crave a loud, curated rock station with hi-fi options. Keep Last.fm active if scrobbling remains non-negotiable for your identity as a listener. Many power users happily pair both.