For some reason I'm a bit suspicious about letting Spotify pick new music for me to listen to with its radio feature; I guess it's just that it feels like such a personal thing so I don't want a machine to do it. So I have a couple of ways of finding new music to listen to; they're probably very obvious but I've found some of my favourite musicians with them so I thought I'd put them here. i) Find out who else is in the band and listen to them. For example I was listening to a great Antonio Sanchez album called Migration, on which it turns out Scott Colley plays bass (I hadn't heard of Scott Colley before). Looking up Scott Colley I found another great album he played on with a pianist called Edward Simon - who I also hadn't heard before - who immediately became on of my favorite pianists. So it goes. In principle you could think of a graph of everyone who's played with everyone else, but even this I don't want to do - just an edge between two musicians doesn't really seem to do a relationship justice and I don't want to formalize it (maybe this is irrational). So I just mentally keep track of where I am. This works well for jazz because people play in all sorts of combinations all the time. ii) Look at who's playing at various jazz clubs I like. This I do just by looking at the programme on the websites of the clubs. It would work for any clubs but for sentimental reasons I end up looking at ones I have fond memories of. This works pretty well for finding new people who I wouldn't have heard of before or found looking at people who've played together (it lets you jump into disconnected components of the graph...). Practically I end up getting through the programme too quickly so I end up doing this in bursts then going back weeks/months later. I like looking at the programmes from e.g. Smalls, the Village Vanguard, and the Jazz Standard just from happy memories there - it would work with any clubs though. Just doing these two things I've found so much that I really love listening to, e.g. Edward Simon two days ago. And it feels like exploring.